radioman148 said:
gar fla said:
My one experience with WJR in the daytime is the time I had a connecting flight in Cleveland. This was in May of 1997.
It was around early afternoon and I had an hour or so layover until I boarded my connecting flight so I sat there in the terminal and got out my Sony Walkman.
I was surprised to find how WJR had such a good signal, especially considering how it was inside the airport as AM reception is not generally as good inside airports.
WJR is like a local in Cleveland. It's a straight water path over Lake Erie.
Same in Conneaut, an hour northeast of Cleveland. I was up there about four weeks ago and was shocked how well it and CKLW come in there (although I should not have been). I personally have heard WJR south of Portsmouth, Ohio daytime, and easily on I-275 in Cincinnati's northern suburbs.
Other AM/FM heard beyond 60 miles here in Thornville, Ohio, 30 miles east of Columbus ...
- WKRC (550/Cincinnati): Not a great signal (3.5-4 out of 10) but very listenable daytime. Disappears at sunset.
- WKBN (570/Youngstown): Same as WKRC, but slightly weaker.
- WLW: Self explanatory.
- WJR: 5 out of 10. Also comes in well at night. When it ran IBOC, the sidebands were very audible here on 750 and 770.
- WKNR (850/Cleveland): Very strong, 7 of 10 here daytime.
- KDKA: Very weak and hardly listenable.
- WTAM (1100/Cleveland): About the same as WKRC.
- WWVA (1170/Wheeling): Ditto.
Those are the big ones ... there might be a few small regional channels I am missing. Not much distant FM comes in here ... we're at the very western edge of the Appalachian foothills and while we get a straight shot of all things Columbus, not much distant from the east comes in. The farthest I can think of is WQKT (104.5) from Wooster, which carries country and a lot of Cleveland sports.