? re: stations that "don't cover their metro area" (for R. Fry, David Eduardo, etc)
So now and then on the forums I'll see some people mention that a particular station doesn't cover its local metro area well, for whatever reason. It has me wondering about something related to the coverage of those stations. Also I named a couple people who I thought might have insight, but anyone is welcome to answer as well. (Another person I thought of is Schrodinger's Cat or however he spells his name; I don't remember if there's an "i" in it but Chrome's spellcheck isn't squawking at me... (it is complaining about quite a few of the city names, especially in Spanish, and some DXing terms and callsigns though))
I'll use L.A. area as an example. I'm guessing the L.A. metro area might encompass as far as (drawing an imaginary contour clockwise around the area) a little past CA-27 (Calabasas , Chatsworth), I-5 and CA-14, along the foothills north of I-210 (like La Cañada, Altadena, Sierra Madre (maybe as far as Mt Wilson?), Glendora), La Verne, Pomona, along CA-71, a little east of CA-241 (including Santiago Canyon, grazing part of Silverado), Trabuco Canyon & Rancho Margarita, between Rancho Mission Viejo and Caspers Wilderness Park, and down to San Clemente, and along the coast back up to around Tuna Canyon Park near CA-27 and CA-1. (Also I'm not sure if Catalina Island would be included as well, but I'm guessing yes due to the saltwater path and the fact that many L.A. directional signals aim out to sea to protect mainland skywaves. (Not that many if any non-DXers regularly listen to them in the L.A. metro area...)
Another way I'm thinking of defining the metro area (of Los Angeles, for example; could also be for NYC or other large cities) would be how far away from the big city would you have to draw an imaginary boundary completely encircling the metro area, so that immediately outside that it's basically wilderness / farm / pasture land (or ocean)? For example, something like the video clip starting at 1:11 in https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlEIq8cGTBc (for this topic just watch from 1:11 to 1:29, or maybe to 2:00. It's a clip of me driving on CA-46 eastbound, somewhere between Paso Robles and Bakersfield. It's part of another series of video clips that includes a Fire Strike benchmark on my PC with other things running simultaneously). In the case of L.A., how wide of an area would that encompass? (I'm guessing it would theoretically include San Diego and San Bernardino, which might normally be considered to be outside the metro area / Southland, right?)
Anyway, as for insufficient station coverage, again using L.A. as an example...
I've heard it said that stations like 740 KBRT, 830 KLAA, 870 KRLA, 900 KALI, 1110 KDIS, 1190 KGBN, 1260 KMZT, 1280 KFRN, 1300 KAZN, 1390 KLTX, 1430 KMRB, 1460 KTYM, 1580 KBLA, and 1650 KFOX apparently don't cover the entire L.A. area at night, and thereby it's hard to "sell" those stations for coverage. (I'm not talking about sale of the stations to a different party, though.)
Thing is, all of those stations, while they have some coverage in the L.A. area, are legally licensed to other cities in the area, not to Los Angeles itself.
So, what I'm wanting to know, is ... even if those stations are insufficient for covering the "metro area", how well do they cover their own legal city of license, at least according to the FCC rules, not the 10 mV/m contour?
Same question goes for some Los Angeles-licensed signals as well, like 790 KABC, 980 KFWB, 1020 KTNQ, 1150 KEIB, 1230 KYPA, 1330 KWKW and 1540 KMPC. In their cases, how well do they cover just within the L.A. city limits, not including outlying areas?
I'm not limiting the topic to L.A., I just used them as an example because I live about 116 miles or so from there, and I often listen to some stations from there (like KFI, KLAA (during baseball season; also I forget which the Dodgers station is - KLAC or KABC? can't remember), KNX, KDIS, occasionally KEIB (for Ramsey/Howard, but their signal is poor here), occasionally KMZT (poor signal though), KFRN, etc) as well as read about them on the L.A. board and other places.
So now and then on the forums I'll see some people mention that a particular station doesn't cover its local metro area well, for whatever reason. It has me wondering about something related to the coverage of those stations. Also I named a couple people who I thought might have insight, but anyone is welcome to answer as well. (Another person I thought of is Schrodinger's Cat or however he spells his name; I don't remember if there's an "i" in it but Chrome's spellcheck isn't squawking at me... (it is complaining about quite a few of the city names, especially in Spanish, and some DXing terms and callsigns though))
I'll use L.A. area as an example. I'm guessing the L.A. metro area might encompass as far as (drawing an imaginary contour clockwise around the area) a little past CA-27 (Calabasas , Chatsworth), I-5 and CA-14, along the foothills north of I-210 (like La Cañada, Altadena, Sierra Madre (maybe as far as Mt Wilson?), Glendora), La Verne, Pomona, along CA-71, a little east of CA-241 (including Santiago Canyon, grazing part of Silverado), Trabuco Canyon & Rancho Margarita, between Rancho Mission Viejo and Caspers Wilderness Park, and down to San Clemente, and along the coast back up to around Tuna Canyon Park near CA-27 and CA-1. (Also I'm not sure if Catalina Island would be included as well, but I'm guessing yes due to the saltwater path and the fact that many L.A. directional signals aim out to sea to protect mainland skywaves. (Not that many if any non-DXers regularly listen to them in the L.A. metro area...)
Another way I'm thinking of defining the metro area (of Los Angeles, for example; could also be for NYC or other large cities) would be how far away from the big city would you have to draw an imaginary boundary completely encircling the metro area, so that immediately outside that it's basically wilderness / farm / pasture land (or ocean)? For example, something like the video clip starting at 1:11 in https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rlEIq8cGTBc (for this topic just watch from 1:11 to 1:29, or maybe to 2:00. It's a clip of me driving on CA-46 eastbound, somewhere between Paso Robles and Bakersfield. It's part of another series of video clips that includes a Fire Strike benchmark on my PC with other things running simultaneously). In the case of L.A., how wide of an area would that encompass? (I'm guessing it would theoretically include San Diego and San Bernardino, which might normally be considered to be outside the metro area / Southland, right?)
Anyway, as for insufficient station coverage, again using L.A. as an example...
I've heard it said that stations like 740 KBRT, 830 KLAA, 870 KRLA, 900 KALI, 1110 KDIS, 1190 KGBN, 1260 KMZT, 1280 KFRN, 1300 KAZN, 1390 KLTX, 1430 KMRB, 1460 KTYM, 1580 KBLA, and 1650 KFOX apparently don't cover the entire L.A. area at night, and thereby it's hard to "sell" those stations for coverage. (I'm not talking about sale of the stations to a different party, though.)
Thing is, all of those stations, while they have some coverage in the L.A. area, are legally licensed to other cities in the area, not to Los Angeles itself.
So, what I'm wanting to know, is ... even if those stations are insufficient for covering the "metro area", how well do they cover their own legal city of license, at least according to the FCC rules, not the 10 mV/m contour?
Same question goes for some Los Angeles-licensed signals as well, like 790 KABC, 980 KFWB, 1020 KTNQ, 1150 KEIB, 1230 KYPA, 1330 KWKW and 1540 KMPC. In their cases, how well do they cover just within the L.A. city limits, not including outlying areas?
I'm not limiting the topic to L.A., I just used them as an example because I live about 116 miles or so from there, and I often listen to some stations from there (like KFI, KLAA (during baseball season; also I forget which the Dodgers station is - KLAC or KABC? can't remember), KNX, KDIS, occasionally KEIB (for Ramsey/Howard, but their signal is poor here), occasionally KMZT (poor signal though), KFRN, etc) as well as read about them on the L.A. board and other places.