Even before NARBA, stations like WWJ had already started to upgrade from 1000 watts to 5000 watts at night. KLAC has a pattern that has 1000 watt nulls like WWJ. Not sure when KLAC went to 5000 directional at night. Many of the other previously nondirectional night facilities also match the IDF of the previous power level. For example, WBCM...WMAX, which went from 1/0.5 U1 to 5/2.5 U4, the nulls in the DA pattern are on the order of the 1000 and 500 watt nondirectional IDFs. That didn't happen until the late 1970s, and I have found several others like that.
The earliest DAs that were already substantially built for the old frequencies, the FCC let modify as best they could with the existing physical authorization or facility. Phases and field ratios were adjusted as best as possible to maintain the pattern as close as possible to that authorized at the old frequency. WWJ's towers were already built spaced 30 degrees apart, and the tall tower was 180 degrees tall at 920 kHz. This became 31 degrees and 186 degrees at 950 kHz. Also in Michigan WXYZ(T), WOOD, and WFDF were originally designed for pre NARBA frequencies 1240, 1270, and 880 respectively. All have been completely replaced and relocated. They are all among the ten highest night power Class Bs authorized on Regional Channels. Both NARBA and World War II substantially slowed the licensing of many of the early US arrays, which were already built or in the process of being built when the US entered WWII. Things then ground to halt until 1946. Some of this information is available on the history cards.