This evening at 8:10 PM Central Daylight Time, I was surfing through the AM dial and landed on 1520 kHz. Hoping for either WWKB Buffalo, NY or KOKC Oklahoma City, OK (the dominant I-B clears of this channel), I instead was able to hear and id KRHW Sikeston, Missouri. Located in the southeastern part of the show-me-state and fairly close to the southern tip of Illinois, westernmost Kentucky (not far from Paducah), and not far from western Tennessee and northeast Arkansas either, this is a pretty good catch for me in East Moline, Illinois (northwestern Illinois in the Quad Cities metro area), especially for a station that's only 5 kW 2 towers daytime, 5 kW 4 towers critical hours, and 1.6 kW 6 towers nighttime. I wonder which of the three afforementioned antenna patterns they were on at the time I caught their signal? I'm surprised KRHW even has nighttime operation being only a couple hundred or so miles from KOKC Oklahoma City. Then again, KOKC probably has a good null to the east to protect WWKB at nighttime. KRHW definitely was on top at the time I heard them. Distance= probably somewhere between 300 and 400 air miles.
Once again, KRHW 1520 Sikeston, Missouri was heard in East Moline, Illinois (Quad Cities USA) on Saturday April 17, 2010, at 8:10 PM Central Daylight Time (skies were clear and it was dusk/twilight approaching nighttime. Local Sunset was 7:45 PM Central Daylight Time)
Once again, KRHW 1520 Sikeston, Missouri was heard in East Moline, Illinois (Quad Cities USA) on Saturday April 17, 2010, at 8:10 PM Central Daylight Time (skies were clear and it was dusk/twilight approaching nighttime. Local Sunset was 7:45 PM Central Daylight Time)