A
Adman4120
Guest
Hello...I am not technically inclined and I posted this same question an another board concerning WGY, so I assume the answer will be the same, but I thought I would ask anyway.
I live in the Rome, NY area, and at night, you cannot even pick up WGY. I thought for a 50,000 watt, non-directional signal, only 90-miles away, it would boom in. I was told by several posters, that Rome must be in a spot where the WGY skywave comes into play, thus, no WGY. All you can hear is noise, other stations underneath, fading in and out.
I was wondering is this is the same reason why I cannot also pick up WHAM, 1180? Are they also 50,000 watts non-directional? At night, you can barely make out that WHAM is even there. Is skywave, the same reason why it does not come in.
If so, what luck. Two stations that I would like to listen to do not come in at night. Rome is obviously located between both station locations and in a bad spot.
Thanks for the help.
I live in the Rome, NY area, and at night, you cannot even pick up WGY. I thought for a 50,000 watt, non-directional signal, only 90-miles away, it would boom in. I was told by several posters, that Rome must be in a spot where the WGY skywave comes into play, thus, no WGY. All you can hear is noise, other stations underneath, fading in and out.
I was wondering is this is the same reason why I cannot also pick up WHAM, 1180? Are they also 50,000 watts non-directional? At night, you can barely make out that WHAM is even there. Is skywave, the same reason why it does not come in.
If so, what luck. Two stations that I would like to listen to do not come in at night. Rome is obviously located between both station locations and in a bad spot.
Thanks for the help.