According to Radio-Locator KZQZ broadcasts with 5,000 watts daytime and nightime. They use two towers for their daytime
pattern and four towers for their nightime pattern.
pattern and four towers for their nightime pattern.
vacuum tube said:They (1430) had a tower go down during a bad storm in 2006, The same storm that took down two of the KTRS (550) towers. Does anyone know if either of those sites have been repaired? As I was told they were both operating non directional with 1250 watts. KTRS daytime operation was not affected since they are already nondirectional with 5 kw daytime. I have heard KTRS at night in Pennsylvania with the nondirectional operation, but have yet to catch 1430...
abcparamount said:radioguybroadcasting: KZQZ is one of the strangest animals around. Local owner, no budget, veryfew commercials, almost no staff. No wonder you didn't hear back for a DX. This station is one fine sounding example of what can be done with nothing but smoke and mirrors. They bill themselves as being renegades, and breaking all the rules, which they do, but when the smoke clears, the station rocks and reaches people, such as Sherrie. There is no cash flow; the corporation that owns it has no debt on it, and things like professional jingles, and streaming are out of the question. I think it may exist as a nice piece of broadcast real estate that could be liquidated quickly at a good profit with little problem. In the meantime, they are one of the very few St. Louis AM stations to show up in the book, and it's a great listen if you're ever within earshot, (even in Nebraska)! By rights, this should be a brokered time station filled with preachers screaming, and vitamin sellers proclaiming miracle cures. 5K daytime and night time in St. Louis is a good throw, and daytime signal can be heard about one hundred miles in every direction. There should be more KZQZ's around the country! This is NOT a wasted signal, like so many others.
abcparamount said:What a shame. Trouble getting it on the East Side as well after sundown. Guess the signal shoots north and south then. What stations are they protecting with the nighttime array?