Savage said:Well, CKLW was (and is) DA-2 with a five-tower array while WJR's a 1-A, NDA unlimited. CK had to protect, among others, Thunder Bay, Belleville, etc., so it's not surprising 760 was better towards Grand Rapids. The CKLW pattern was designed to be pretty much a local signal in Detroit, Toledo and Cleveland - and it was, back in the day. We routinely gave temp readings for the three cities.
CKLW mostly protected the "owner" of the channel, XELO in Cd. Juárez, at night. All Canadian 800's, including Moose Jaw and others, shot away from Mexico and XELO at night. There were also a fair number of 790's in the US that CKLW had to protect as well as the rather large protected contour of WBBM in Chicago... perhaps the more likely reason for Grand Rapids being in a lesser signal area.
The CKLW pattern was designed to protect Mexico at night, and all the co-channel Canadian stations as well as the adjacents. The coverage it had was a result of sending the signal towards whatever areas were left. If the station had been designed for best performance, lower Michigan, NW Ohio and NE Indiana would be a desirable market area. Cleveland, a major metro of its own, would not.
CKLW was often thought to have had much bigger Cleveland numbers than fact supports. While the western suburbs like Parma got a pretty decent signal, most of the metro did not.