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KFI and their new stick

DavidEduardo said:
680 has large fulltimers in San Antonio, St. Joseph, MO, and Boston and Baltimore. There are quite a few smaller ones, also. A 1-A was, originally, a sole night operation on its channel. 680, like channels such as 710, 810 and 850, for B's.
Yes, I already knew that, although I assumed that those fulltimers on 680 weren't licensed until many years after KPO went to 50kW. But what does the designation actually mean? What, for example, was a Class II-A (this seems to be equivalent to today's Class B)? Was there such a thing as a II-B or III-A or II-C for lesser signals? Sorry if it's a dumb question, but I wasn't even born back when these designations were used, and Google is rather unhelpful trying to figure out what they mean.
 
Boston, San Antonio and Baltimore are stations that have been on 680 since before the NARBA reallocation (which did not affect 680) and, I think the creation of the clears of both class going back another decade. A 1-B clear had multiple "biggies" on it, like KNBR and WRKO, or KGO and WGY. Generally, one was non-directional, and the other (s) directinal. However, look at 710 with KIRO and WOR and WAQI, all big 50 kw and directional, with WHB, KGNC and KEEL and the Duluth a station squeezed in in the middle. Or 1190, with KEX in Portland and WOWO in Indiana, with a few small stations in the middle, and eastern seabord.
 
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