vibe said:
Re; rcs's reply: the reception of 106.9 CCC was consistently stronger than DRC in practically every nook and cranny of CT and in Sheffield MA. Although living now in MA I remember when DRC and CCC were virtually equal in signal strength in many areas; now no longer the case. Plus there were no out of area stations showing up on the radio this wed-thur-fri. Nothing.
That isn't true everywhere and certainly not in every nook or cranny! WCCC
should be much stronger than WDRC-FM in northern CT and western MA because of where their respective transmitter sites are. WDRC-FM's site is more than twice as far from the Springfield area as WCCC's is.
But, listening in the car just last week, I had some fade on DRC-FM in the Sturbridge/Charlton, MA area - but it came back up for a bit approaching Oxford and Auburn before being gone for good. None of the other WEST PEAK stations came in that far, nor does WTIC-FM. CCC is the strongest there, but goes away in the Worcester area too. Saying that CCC is stronger than DRC-FM in Massachusets elicits a big "so what?" from me. It should be, the tx site is much closer - in fact, significantly closer to Springfield than to New Haven. Let me flip this around by telling you that DRC-FM comes in quite well in much of central/eastern Long Island while WCCC hardly makes the trip. WCCC, WTIC-FM, and WRCH do not do very well in southern CT or adjacent sections of NY but do better in Springfield. It's all about location, location, location.
Combine that with coverage that extends well into Fairfield County (in places where you can't pick up WCCC) and I stand by my statement that WDRC-FM has the best overall coverage of an FM station in the state. In the car, I can listen to it for 2 hours straight when driving from NY to Boston. I cannot say that for any other station in that area.
Remember, some of the local reports are subjective - thanks to terrain. Which is why my comment is a more general one. For example, all Hartford/New Haven area stations die pretty quickly as you head south on I-684 into Westchester County, NY. However, WDRC and WPLR do come back for a few minutes in central Westchester before fading for good. Yet, all of the H/NH stations come in farther south in Fairfield County. All of this is thanks to terrain, as 684 generally runs along west-facing hills with terrain blockage eastward. The same thing happens in NE and NW CT and western MA in hilly terrain. A good example of this is Burlington, CT, much of which slopes downward to the northeast. West Peak and New Haven signals come in better in parts of MA than they do in parts of Burlington. In fact, Springfield stations can come in like locals there, better than WDRC, WHCN, etc. But, that is a local effect which doesn't mean that those stations are stronger. It's just the trick that terrain can play.
Likewise, West Peak signals seem to do better in parts of Torrington than the Avon/Simsbury ones do, even though they must travel farther. And, WCCC doesn't come in well at all in Waterbury or Danbury - places where WDRC comes in just fine. It just depends upon the section of town and where the hills are.
Overall, West Peak is the best tx site in the state (thanks to a central location and favorable terrain) and, thanks to frequency allocation, WDRC has the best FM signal of those that transmit from that spot. Their audio quality, however, is a different subject....
