The old WGTO daytime pattern provided far better coverage than the present WFLF daytime pattern.
Every time an AM station (which has a directional array) changes transmitter/tower sites, the FCC requires the station to provide greater protection in the nulls.
WGTO/WFLF has moved transmitter/tower sites multiple times since the original (four tower) Lake Alfred location.
This is a link to the original WGTO 50kW daytime coverage map:
http://www.dizzyrambler.com/features/WGTO/Broadcast Map.pdf
Frank
It looks like the pattern must have always reduced the directional field to the North and South compared to 50000 watts, at least after they first increased power 50000 watts, and concentrated the power into the East and West during the daytime to increase the signal on the Coasts. I'm surprised that they moved that many times, as an array for 540 takes taller towers and a lot of land. Many parallelogram type arrays have a larger dimension of over a quarter of a mile including the ground system, so you have to have 40 acres at the very least, and 80 or 160 acres are used on some arrays. CHML 900 has an array that stretches about a half mile without the ground system, and that's not even really low on the dial. Sometimes they will sell off corners of the property. One I know of started with 80 acres and ended up with 72 acres before they moved. Just one more reason to not have rules that artificially favor broadside arrays over endfire arrays.