KQNT, but it would have been KHQ-AM when 590 Honolulu was KGMB. KHQ is still on TV-6 in Spokane (NBC).
Surprised they didn't get interference from KUGN Eugene OR instead. Also 5KW and a little closer than Spokane.
-crainbebo
I'm sure there are many more received here that were top 40 in the good old days of radio.
But don't forget that Honolulu had arguably one of the best Top 40's in the country with KPOI and the "Poi Boys". There was huge talent there, including Ron Jacobs who went on to program KHJ in LA to #1 and Tom Rounds who did the same at KFRC.
I'm not sure what became of any of those guys except T.R., but it was truly an all-star top 40 lineup. Perhaps David can shed a little light on this. K-POI and the Poi Boys in the mid-60s was as good as it gets. After I returned home, I had an orange day-glo K-POI bumper sticker (complete with Poi Boy logo) on the car for a year or two!
How about the reverse?
Has anyone heard any Hawaii AM stations from the west coast?
I tried a little bit one of the times I visited northern California in the 70's using my North American Radio-TV Station Guide book but there was nothing I could get or at least nothing I could ID.
What's the Big AM in Hawaii?
I go try them in the winter times
How about the reverse?
Has anyone heard any Hawaii AM stations from the west coast?
I worked a "second job" for TR for twenty years until his unfortunate death, and even worked briefly with Ron Jacobs until he left TR's company and went back to Hawai'i. Were TR still around, I could have asked him about the rest of the crew, but I don't know anyone else who was there.
Some behind the scenes folks at K-POI did pretty well, too. The promotion guy went on to be one of the promoters and organizers who put together that little rock festival at Woodstock some years later. I met him at TR's home several times... and heard how he learned to do open air events from TR, first in San Francisco and then in Miami.
I also got some perspective on Honolulu radio from working for Cecil Heftel, who owned KGMB and his son, Richard, who managed it. The market was pretty much Aku & KGMB and KPOI for many, many years after KULA and KGU declined as music based radio took over.
There is no single "big" station. The possibilities are all 10 kw, and it just depends on your local frequencies whether they may be possible.
The main ones are 650, 690, 760, 830 and 1040. That's because those are the 10 kw station on relatively clear frequencies. Back when these channels were clearer, all were heard in the eastern US, too.