Yeah, 5KW isn't that great in reality on 95% of AM stations. Around here, they get swallowed up due to the electrical interference due to our power not being underground. Luckily for you, you have plenty of signals near Chicago![]()
The earlier licensed AMs on lower channels do quite fine, even in areas with terrible ground conductivity like much of New England.
WICC on 600 does amazingly for its power, and 960 in New Haven is a similarly great signal, just like 630 in Providence, 590 in Boston, 560 in ME and 550 in VT.
In fact, one of the largest coverage areas in the US is that of 5 kw WNAX in Yankton, SD, on 570.
As another poster mentioned, the dominant stations on the regional channels were licensed for the most part in the 30's and were designed to cover much more compact metros when there was little noise on the AM band. Power levels were established by the FRC and FCC in the period from the late 20's to the early 30's. As cities grew and noise increased, many of those stations were outgrown by their markets.
As strange as it may have seemed 80 years ago, today our nation's capital does not have a single station that covers the entire market day and night with a usable signal.