> > How can WTNR in Holland, MI at 94.5 (50,000 watts) and
> WCEN
> > in Hemlock, MI at 94.5 (100,000 watts) not interfere with
> > each other MAJORLY in and around the Grand Rapids/Mount
> > Pleasant area? Check out their coverage on Radio-Locator
> or
> > some other place and explain how they share the same
> > frequency. Any explanations out there? Stumbled on this
> > and it doesn't make sense.
> >
> Their coverage maps really don't overlap all that much on
> radio-locator. The purple "distant signal" lines have
> slight overlap near Greenville, and that's pretty much the
> usuable signal range on FM in my experience from using those
> maps. For instance - I know from experience that WCEN's
> signal is quite bad by the time you get to Lansing to the
> south, and reaches to about Cadillac to the north.
>
Greenville does seem to be the only place where the signals would be roughly equal.
FM radios capture the strongest signal in a specific location. For most of each station's red and purple contours, they would be stronger than the other. In and around Greenville, people can probably get both just by walking around the house.
However, they still seem to be way too close. On good tropo days, it seems like they'd eat up each other's signals almost everywhere.
Is there a natural feature in the region that shields the towers from the line of sight of the other?