WCKY jumping to gun on nighttime IBOC?

I have to wonder if those people in isolated areas like you describe just don't ever watch any TV or radio. I believe it was Van Horn, TX where I spent a night and there was only one religious translator strong enough to be stable. Everything else was from Carlsbad, NM, weak in the static, from 101 miles away. Not listenable.
Thank goodness for XM.
Last but not least - is WCKY in Cincy running IBOC at night regularly? It was on a few nights ago; the data carrier over 1540 was crystal clear. There was even a lot of noise on (normally decent) WLAC at 1510. I can only imagine what it was doing to poor little WKXG down the road in Greenwood, MS... Their whopping 2 watts of nighttime power on 1540 prolly didn't stand a chance against the evil IBOC.
(I once sat in the parking lot of the studio/transmitter site at night and was hearing co-channel noise that was clearly audible in the background. Aside from the projects surrounding the site, I can't imagine how anyone else in town could hear this weak signal: WKXG's nighttime coverage)
Dang, where were you that you lost service in W. Texas? I had a quad-band GSM phone through T-Mobile when I travelled through there and never lost service even when I was well off the interstate. Granted, I'd never heard of some of the carriers (and a few times I locked onto Mexican providers movistar and TELCEL - those were some expensive calls!) :rbrucecarter5 said:It certainly is an interesting phenomenon the first few times you hear it - I didn't know what was going on with my car radio when I drove the vast expanses of West Texas. Every few minutes, the cell phones went seeking for service they would never find.
Incidentally - I found one of those stretches of road with NO local radio service, AM or FM. The highway from Clayton to Raton in New Mexico. Seek on both bands cycles over and over again, doesn't stop on anything. I am sure the residents of Capulin, Des Moines, Grenville, and Mount Dora NM are eagerly awaiting nighttime AM HD radio - jamming their contact with the outside world. Oh wait - those poverty stricken folks can all buy $200 HD radios. Or they subscribe to satellite - or they have wideband internet. Or do they - I don't seem to remember seeing any satellite TV dishes on the shacks.
I have to wonder if those people in isolated areas like you describe just don't ever watch any TV or radio. I believe it was Van Horn, TX where I spent a night and there was only one religious translator strong enough to be stable. Everything else was from Carlsbad, NM, weak in the static, from 101 miles away. Not listenable.
Thank goodness for XM.
Last but not least - is WCKY in Cincy running IBOC at night regularly? It was on a few nights ago; the data carrier over 1540 was crystal clear. There was even a lot of noise on (normally decent) WLAC at 1510. I can only imagine what it was doing to poor little WKXG down the road in Greenwood, MS... Their whopping 2 watts of nighttime power on 1540 prolly didn't stand a chance against the evil IBOC.
(I once sat in the parking lot of the studio/transmitter site at night and was hearing co-channel noise that was clearly audible in the background. Aside from the projects surrounding the site, I can't imagine how anyone else in town could hear this weak signal: WKXG's nighttime coverage)