Ever since I installed my simple 75-ft outdoor dipole wire antenna, I've noticed a drastically increased number of stations on AM during the daytime. Before the dipole, I was using a 40-ft outdoor longwire connected directly to the back of my receiver, and reception was mediocre at best since it received a lot of electrical interference from the house.
So far, with the new antenna I'm able to receive 650 WSM Nashville during day with little to no fading, at 255 miles. What really amazes me is how 700 WLW Cincinnati can still be heard in the early and mid-afternoon hours, at 466 miles! Even though it's pretty weak and slowly fades in and out, the "Newsradio 700 WLW" slogan is clearly heard.
I'm still exploring to see what else can be heard, but I think WLW will my best regular dx. I'm still trying to catch 870 WWL New Orleans, with no luck so far, even though it's 100 miles closer than Cincinnati. Perhaps the shorter wavelength hampers WWL from reaching me.
So, what's the farthest AM DX you can get during early PM hours?
So far, with the new antenna I'm able to receive 650 WSM Nashville during day with little to no fading, at 255 miles. What really amazes me is how 700 WLW Cincinnati can still be heard in the early and mid-afternoon hours, at 466 miles! Even though it's pretty weak and slowly fades in and out, the "Newsradio 700 WLW" slogan is clearly heard.
I'm still exploring to see what else can be heard, but I think WLW will my best regular dx. I'm still trying to catch 870 WWL New Orleans, with no luck so far, even though it's 100 miles closer than Cincinnati. Perhaps the shorter wavelength hampers WWL from reaching me.
So, what's the farthest AM DX you can get during early PM hours?