Hearing a lot of San Diego stations with powerful signals!
(Like Rush Limbaugh on 95.7 - KOGO's FM feed)
(Like Rush Limbaugh on 95.7 - KOGO's FM feed)
Big 121 said:Likewise, LA signals booming into East San Diego county last 2 days.
Lkeller said:Big 121 said:Likewise, LA signals booming into East San Diego county last 2 days.
I recall being able to pick up KRTH without much static in parts of San Diego. As a kid growing up in Tujunga (foothills east of the San Fernando Valley), I recall that before cable TV came into town (about 1967), we got superior over the air TV reception from the San Diego channels -6, 8 , and 10 - than we did from the LA network stations.
michael hagerty said:Lkeller said:Big 121 said:Likewise, LA signals booming into East San Diego county last 2 days.
I recall being able to pick up KRTH without much static in parts of San Diego. As a kid growing up in Tujunga (foothills east of the San Fernando Valley), I recall that before cable TV came into town (about 1967), we got superior over the air TV reception from the San Diego channels -6, 8 , and 10 - than we did from the LA network stations.
Llew: Looking at Google Maps, that makes sense. San Diego is just far enough east that there's a straight line where the signal could snake between Verdugo and the big mountain. But you'd be in sort of a shadow of Wilson.
Lkeller said:michael hagerty said:Lkeller said:Big 121 said:Likewise, LA signals booming into East San Diego county last 2 days.
I recall being able to pick up KRTH without much static in parts of San Diego. As a kid growing up in Tujunga (foothills east of the San Fernando Valley), I recall that before cable TV came into town (about 1967), we got superior over the air TV reception from the San Diego channels -6, 8 , and 10 - than we did from the LA network stations.
Llew: Looking at Google Maps, that makes sense. San Diego is just far enough east that there's a straight line where the signal could snake between Verdugo and the big mountain. But you'd be in sort of a shadow of Wilson.
It depended heavily upon the neighborhood you lived in. While we got superior signals from San Diego, some neighborhoods got better signals from the Mt. Wilson stations in LA.
In the mid 60s, developers built a couple hundred tract homes in a neighborhood that got no over the air TV reception at all - not exactly a selling point. So the developers actually started the local cable company to provide for their own residents, and it was later rolled out to the entire town.
The same is true where I live now in San Francisco. I'm on a south facing hill out of the line of sight of the Twin Peaks tower which houses most of the TV station transmitters, which I canot get without cable. But San Jose and Monterey-Salinas stations come in quite clearly OTA. Same with radio - the San Jose stations come in clearly, but many SF stations are staticky. What I can't figure is 50K watt KGO, which doesn't come in clearly in my house, despite the fact that their transmitter is just off the Dumbarton Bridge, about 20 miles south of me. ???
ScottBurns said:The San Diego stations also come in very nicely in Santa Barbara. This is especially true while trying to DX at the beach. As a matter of fact, many of the San Diego stations come in better than the LA-area stations.