My dad grew up in the 1930s in Central Ohio, Portsmouth and Chilicothe, and got 700 WLW Cincinnati on his crystal radio. I wonder if WLW was 500,000 watts then, or was he simply picking up the nearest non-directional 50,000 watt station? (Wikipedia says WLW was half-a-million watts from 1934 to 1939. But other stations complained about the interference and competitive disadvantage so WLW had to give up the superpower.)
I grew up so close to 770 WABC's 50 kw tower in Lodi NJ that I could see the top of the tower from our living room window. I didn't have a crystal set. But if you grounded a tape recorder, you got WABC. If you picked up a pay phone without putting in the quarter, you heard WABC. If a friend bought a walkie-talkie set, you heard WABC in the background. So I assume that's what I would have gotten if I had a crystal set as a kid.
Before dropping back in power, WLW was interfering with WOR and had to install a directional antenna. The amount of signal in the null to WOR was equivalent to 50,000 watts!