How about 15 MHz in El Cajon, CA?
I've gotten all of them within 30 miles of Manistee except WCZY. WKZG and WVCN have been heard here this spring (WKZG a little more often), with WJMK being heard 25 miles south at Ludington. CJQM makes it in occasionally.Buckeyes2001 said:104.3 MHz in Manistee, MI:
Probably several stations with weak signals taking turns fading in and out, including:
CJQM/Sault St. Marie, ON
WCZY/Mt. Pleasant, MI
WKZG/Seymour, WI
WVCN/Baraga, MI
WOMC/Detroit, MI
WJMK/Chicago, IL
Airplane scatter can easily have an influence on which station(s) fade in
Definitely looks like a great DXing frequency there!
ftballfan said:99.5 in Maumee, OH - WYCD Detroit
During the day, it's a weak WGVS. At night, KOA is the main station, with WKNR and WGVS making appearances from time to time.pianoplayer88key said:Aww I was hoping to have some fun with some AM channels in Barrow, AK, or Kekaha, HI, for which no station on said channel exists in the state specified.(For Hawaii I would pick the 9/10 split commons, or the graveyards that are 1k off from a split. A few examples:
Kekaha, HI - 1170, 1340.5, 1449.5 (the last 2 are split between a GY and a 9k as is 1340.5 in AK below)
Barrow, AK - 540, 760, 840, 990, 1030, 1090, 1180, 1340.5, 1560
Meanwhile, for 850 in Manistee, MI…
Daytime, I'd expect WGVS Muskegon, MI, to be faintly audible on a good pocket radio like an SRF-59. Adding a Select-A-Tenna or using a Superadio or equivalent could also bring in WKNR Cleveland, OH.
During critical hours, I would also look for WWJC Duluth, MN, and WTAR Norfolk, VA.
At night, I think it'd be a competition between WGVS and KOA.
radioman148 said:OK the Alaska idea I like, so let's try this (a little different take)
What can you get from the lower 48 in Fairbanks, Ak? (In the winter, of course)
I wonder if anyone here has actually tried it?
Buckeyes2001 said:radioman148 said:OK the Alaska idea I like, so let's try this (a little different take)
What can you get from the lower 48 in Fairbanks, Ak? (In the winter, of course)
I wonder if anyone here has actually tried it?
I suspect at night in winter you could get the following from Fairbanks, AK:
640 KFI (maybe only during Aurora)
710 KIRO
720 KDWN (probably Aurora only)
740 KCBS (probably Aurora only)
780 KKOH (Aurora only)
860 KPAM (critical hours)
950 KJR (maybe)
1000 KOMO
1070 KNX (Aurora only)
1190 KEX
1550 KKOV (critical hours)
just my guesses
pianoplayer88key said:For Alaska, I was thinking... You know there are frequencies with multiple high-power co-channel nighttime stations, right? In the 48 states they're supposed to protect each other with their directional patterns, but many of them send it north. In Alaska, what's the chance that some of those could yield same-strength co-channel interference in Alaska?
As for Hawaii, it'd be interesting to see about mainland US and eastern hemisphere stations on the 9/10 commons competing with each other. For example what would it be like on 1170? (There's no Hawaiian on that frequency.)
WJW Cleveland, WISH Indianapolis, and WCHS Charleston WV would likely take turns, with WOOD Grand Rapids and WWCP Johnstown making occasional appearances.Buckeyes2001 said:New one and something a little different this time:
TV Channel 8 in Columbus, OH (before the DTV transition)
I have some experience with that one when I lived there and after a few guesses I'll give my results.