I believe it's still one tower in the back of a lumberyard near Thomas Rd. and 64th St. in Snobsdale.
True, but it covers a 15-20 mile radius with its 52,000 miliwatts pretty well. I can hear it just fine as long as I'm listening outside or in my car. Inside, it's either the 92.7 translator or 93.3-HD2.Well, if it's a non-directional, I doubt that any increase in night power would be allowable without a directional array during those hours. Sorry, @LamptimerFan.
WDEA's transmitter is on Union River Bay south of Ellsworth and their signal goes straight across the water to NS. I'm sure WBZ 1030 blasts in there as well.My daily station here in the Southwest part of Nova Scotia is 1370 WDEA in Ellsworth Maine. It's always on when I am in my workshop. I much prefer their music than what's on the local station here. It comes in quite clear daytimes. They also broadcast the Red Sox games too, which I rather enjoy while puttering in my workshop.
Being originally from the Boston area, I do sometimes try some night listening to see if I can catch any stations from that area as well.
Forgive me if you've advertised it before and I'm forgetting, but is a stream of your station available? I would love hearing that hybridization in action. themellowsound.net and 97litefm.com are already in my Winamp bookmarks, both of which I believe were started by fans of the old KNX-FM.@LamptimerFanI forgot about my Part 15 on 1610 AM.
My "format" varies widely, from oldies to standards and easy listening, and even classical and new age stuff like Celtic harp.
At the moment, it's a fairly mundane mix of soft rock 70s-80s which is somewhat of an amalgamation of KNX-FM's "Mellow Sound," KTEA out of Cambria, CA, and various other sources.
I want to clarify that my sound is probably leaning more toward KNX-FM, because I've been on a song-adding spree, and I found many nice examples while listening to TheMellowSound.net.@LamptimerFan I forgot about my Part 15 on 1610 AM.
My "format" varies widely, from oldies to standards and easy listening, and even classical and new age stuff like Celtic harp.
At the moment, it's a fairly mundane mix of soft rock 70s-80s which is somewhat of an amalgamation of KNX-FM's "Mellow Sound," KTEA out of Cambria, CA, and various other sources.
One signal is kind of limiting, so I might set up a second one so I can have, say, oldies and soft/yacht rock on one and easy listening on the other.
c
I want to clarify that my sound is probably leaning more toward KNX-FM, because I've been on a song-adding spree, and I found many nice examples while listening to TheMellowSound.net.
Last night I added in a few older songs from the 60s that I thought fit well enough.
c
Do you stream?
Well, officially, I don't have a stream.If he does, it will be the first time I ever heard of a Part 15 AM operator doing so. (Not that it couldn't happen, just that a Part 15 operator usually isn't interested in an audience other than his own family.)
First off, how do you set one up privately like that?Unofficially, however, I do have one set up for myself for fun and experimentation. I want to get a Live365 subscription eventually (they cover the licensing) so I can make it official and not worry about the Licensing Gestapo coming after me.
Last year when I was in Yarmouth, NS, I found that WJIB Cambridge was coming in on 720.My daily station here in the Southwest part of Nova Scotia is 1370 WDEA in Ellsworth Maine
It's truly amazing to listen to the AM band in Atlantic Canada. Other than WBZ, there's almost nothing on in middays. Within a few hours of sunrise and sunset, several Boston AMs are heard and maybe WDEA or WGAN Portland. Maybe a NYC station. I remember WBBR 1130 came in sometimes but again, not in middays.WDEA's transmitter is on Union River Bay south of Ellsworth and their signal goes straight across the water to NS. I'm sure WBZ 1030 blasts in there as well.
One of the few functions of the AM band in the US is to support formats that can't be supported on FM, like standards or programs for smaller ethnic groups.It's truly amazing to listen to the AM band in Atlantic Canada.