Given that the range of a station on the left side of the dial is larger, what clear channel station with a non-directional signal would be able to cover the most land? I guess Canada could be included.
Given that the range of a station on the left side of the dial is larger, what clear channel station with a non-directional signal would be able to cover the most land? I guess Canada could be included.
I think that we discussed this previously and the champ was CBK, Watrous, Saskatchewan. The runners-up were WNAX and KFYR and, IIRC, WMT and maybe WIBW.
The discussion was based on ground-wave coverage, though.
In the Continental United States, I would assume WSM. It's the lowest dial position AM with 50kW-ND nights, a location away from the coast, and no co-channel stations with night authorization east of the Rockies.
Higher channel stations like WLS, KMOX and KSL might work too, largely depending on their co-channels arrangements.
I would assume anything on the coasts -- WABC, KFI, WWL, etc would not qualify due to sending a lot of their signal out to sea.
Based on reception on my travels, WLW has a tremendous nighttime skywave foot print. I have personally received them in Boston, Key West and in Denver at night.
Bob
I was in Puerto Rico about 8 or 9 years ago and WLW had the most consistently good skywave signal of any of the stations in the continental US.
You must have been there during unusual conditions. For the 4 decades I lived or worked there, 700 was almost entirely owned by the Maracaibo, Venezuela, station. Until about 10 years ago, it was also covered by the RJR station on 700, making WLW hearable but always interfered with.
Today, both the YV and the Jamaican are gone, and 700 is surprisingly void of high power Cubans so WLW should not be a very hard catch. Today, in fact, it is the cleanest of the US clear channels in the Caribbean Basin.
Actually, WWL and WBZ direct their signals inland. There is a loss of land coverage over all land associated with directional vs. nondirectional though.
I think that we discussed this previously and the champ was CBK, Watrous, Saskatchewan..
I am another vote for WSM. There aren't any other stations in the Continental US broadcasting 1 KW or higher at night to interfere. There's a 10KW up in Saskatoon Canada but that's not going to interfere *that* much.
When I was growing up in California in the 80's they came in stronger than the other powerhouses at a similar distance (such as WCCO WHO WLS etc). And now that I'm in Chicago they are again as strong as any station at that distance from me.
I remember a discussion here a few years ago when iHeart sold all of its towers that the new owner was selling some of the land surrounding WLW's tower for a shopping center or industrial park. At the time, there were discussions that such a building might have an effect on the station's ground wave. I haven't kept up if that shopping center was built or if it had any effect.
Even thought WBZ directs most of their signal inland they can still be heard on European SDRs in late fall and winter. WWL can be heard on them too, but some of their signal goes that way.