In the Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport News, VA-NC DMA, WSKY-TV (virtual 4, RF 9) is licensed to Manteo on the market's extreme south end, roughly 100 statute miles from Williamsburg and 130 or so from southern Delmarva--the market's northern reaches, and a good 70 miles from the cities of the Penninsula (Newport News, Hampton, and Poquoson)--all of this in a market that also had an analog channel 3!
Next-door in the Greenville-Washington-New Bern, NC DMA, primary Fox affiliate, Morehead City-licensed WFXI-TV 8, is about as far east as they can get without being in the ocean to protect WRIC-TV in Petersburg. Morehead City is probably 75 miles from Greenville and Washington, and the WFXI tower is 30 miles east of Morehead City. In the analog days, New Bern was about as far into the market's core cities as they made it, and likely very snowy there. Satellite WYDO-TV 14 rebroadcasts FOX to the core of the market.
Glad someone brought up the example of WNCN-TV, even though the Raleigh-Goldsboro distance pales in comparison to the examples from out west. Though licensed to Goldsboro, the relationship between WNCN (which signed on as WYED in 1988), and its city of license has been on paper only--channel 17 has never had studios or an antenna in Goldsboro. Radio conglomerate Beasley built the station from studios on US 70 in Clayton (just outside Raleigh in Johnston County) with the original 1,550 tower a few miles south of the studios (word has it that tower is now in Reno, NV. You can still see where the tower stood--complete with the original antenna--laying on the ground on Google Earth right off the new US 70 Clayton By-Pass). The station boosted its power from 2.6 million watts to 5 million watts in 1995 at the original site after Outlet bought them, only to move to an arm of the 2,000-foot digital candleabra in Auburn, as you mentioned, five years later. Several other TV stations are licensed to outlying communities in our market such as ion affiliate WRPX-TV in Rocky Mount, TCT affiliate WRAY-TV in Wilson and Fayetteville's two stations, Univision affiliate WUVC-TV and another ion affiliate WFPX-TV (which has never been seen, analog or digital, in the Raleigh-Durham portion of the market..not even a faint hint of a signal in Durham).
Next-door in the Greenville-Washington-New Bern, NC DMA, primary Fox affiliate, Morehead City-licensed WFXI-TV 8, is about as far east as they can get without being in the ocean to protect WRIC-TV in Petersburg. Morehead City is probably 75 miles from Greenville and Washington, and the WFXI tower is 30 miles east of Morehead City. In the analog days, New Bern was about as far into the market's core cities as they made it, and likely very snowy there. Satellite WYDO-TV 14 rebroadcasts FOX to the core of the market.
Glad someone brought up the example of WNCN-TV, even though the Raleigh-Goldsboro distance pales in comparison to the examples from out west. Though licensed to Goldsboro, the relationship between WNCN (which signed on as WYED in 1988), and its city of license has been on paper only--channel 17 has never had studios or an antenna in Goldsboro. Radio conglomerate Beasley built the station from studios on US 70 in Clayton (just outside Raleigh in Johnston County) with the original 1,550 tower a few miles south of the studios (word has it that tower is now in Reno, NV. You can still see where the tower stood--complete with the original antenna--laying on the ground on Google Earth right off the new US 70 Clayton By-Pass). The station boosted its power from 2.6 million watts to 5 million watts in 1995 at the original site after Outlet bought them, only to move to an arm of the 2,000-foot digital candleabra in Auburn, as you mentioned, five years later. Several other TV stations are licensed to outlying communities in our market such as ion affiliate WRPX-TV in Rocky Mount, TCT affiliate WRAY-TV in Wilson and Fayetteville's two stations, Univision affiliate WUVC-TV and another ion affiliate WFPX-TV (which has never been seen, analog or digital, in the Raleigh-Durham portion of the market..not even a faint hint of a signal in Durham).
kilamanjero said:The Raleigh-Durham-Fayetteville DMA NBC affiliate (and formerly NBC O&O), WNCN, is licensed to Goldsboro, North Carolina, which is 55 miles from Raleigh, 70 miles from Durham, and about 60 from Fayetteville. The original station owners, Outlet Broadcasting, targeted the DMA (moving its tower to Clayton, NC) as a NBC affiliate after the network got sick of WRDC and its consistently low ratings and lack of news product. NBC soon after purchased the station and moved its studios to Northeast Raleigh in 1995. In 2000, the tower moved to Auburn, North Carolina, allowing a city grade signal in both Raleigh and Goldsboro. A very odd situation for a spatially dispersed market.