Clayman43130 said:
Does someone know why (for example) 610, I can hear wtvn all over ohio during the day and at night I hear static in Lancaster as if it is a weak signal. It was explained to me once that they drop power at night.
Why do stations have to do this at night?
WTVN isn't required to reduce power at night. (though many other stations are, including WBNS which reduces from 5,000 watts to 1,000)
However, WTVN is required to switch to a directional antenna. I don't have their directional pattern handy but I'm pretty sure they're protecting stations in Philadelphia and Kansas City that were on 610 first. Of course, Lancaster is between Columbus and Philadelphia and I'm sure you're in the middle of WTVN's nighttime null.
Unlike FM, AM stations "get out" a lot better at night than they do during the day. An atmospheric layer that allows AM signals to "bounce" great distances is blocked during the day by another, lower, layer. At night, this blocking layer goes away. If WTVN were to operate non-directionally at night, its signal would "bounce" into the Philadelphia and Kansas City markets and clobber the stations there. (yes, an Ohio station is fully capable of causing harmful interference in Kansas City.)
WTVN hasn't been on 610 that long in AM radio terms. Going into World War II, they were a "limited time" station on 640KHz, (then known as WHKC) allowed to sign on the air at Columbus sunrise and remain on until the sun set at the "dominant" station on 640 -- KFI in Los Angeles.
At the end of the war, WTVN was authorized to move to 610 and operate 24/7. However, since WIP Philadelphia and WDAF Kansas City had been on 610 since at least the mid-1930s, WTVN had to protect them from interference.