Some of the more interesting TV DX'ing I was involved in was with a friend of mine in one of the suburbs northeast of the downtown Cincinnati area in the late 1950's. There were Saturday nights that our parents were out together and it gave us a chance to see what could be picked up.
On a large TV downstairs that had a nice rabbit ears, getting WTTV, Channel 4, out of the Indianapolis area was almost always available. There was also WFBM, Channel 6, from Indianapolis, too. One night, Channel 6 was doing its sign-off and we both recognized the voice of Ken Linn doing the announcing. It appears obvious my friend's house was in a good location for signals from Indianapolis. In addition, several times, he also picked up WKZO, Channel 3, from Kalamazoo, Michigan. That's one station I never received at my house - even years later with an outside deep fringe antenna.
There was also a small RCA portable TV at my friend's house that was several years old. For it, you had to connect a rabbit ears. On one of those late nights, we took it to a second-floor bedroom to see what might be received. As noted, this TV was older and through use, the channel numbers had worn off the selector dial, so when the local stations had signed off, you had no point of reference in terms of knowing what channel number you had. In doing that, we once picked up the sound-only of studio wrestling. We had no idea where that was coming from. To this day, I still don't know - maybe Chicago?
A part of TV DX'ing was waiting until some stations signed off as it would enable more distant signals to come in on those channels. Unfortunately, that is something else that has changed about TV - so many stations do not sign off anymore.
On a large TV downstairs that had a nice rabbit ears, getting WTTV, Channel 4, out of the Indianapolis area was almost always available. There was also WFBM, Channel 6, from Indianapolis, too. One night, Channel 6 was doing its sign-off and we both recognized the voice of Ken Linn doing the announcing. It appears obvious my friend's house was in a good location for signals from Indianapolis. In addition, several times, he also picked up WKZO, Channel 3, from Kalamazoo, Michigan. That's one station I never received at my house - even years later with an outside deep fringe antenna.
There was also a small RCA portable TV at my friend's house that was several years old. For it, you had to connect a rabbit ears. On one of those late nights, we took it to a second-floor bedroom to see what might be received. As noted, this TV was older and through use, the channel numbers had worn off the selector dial, so when the local stations had signed off, you had no point of reference in terms of knowing what channel number you had. In doing that, we once picked up the sound-only of studio wrestling. We had no idea where that was coming from. To this day, I still don't know - maybe Chicago?
A part of TV DX'ing was waiting until some stations signed off as it would enable more distant signals to come in on those channels. Unfortunately, that is something else that has changed about TV - so many stations do not sign off anymore.