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DaveArnold
Guest
WINS is heard well in Bermuda.During their music days they ran some spots for stores in Hamilton Bermuda.
DaveArnold said:WINS is heard well in Bermuda.During their music days they ran some spots for stores in Hamilton Bermuda.
DaveArnold said:WINS is heard well in Bermuda.During their music days they ran some spots for stores in Hamilton Bermuda.
taylorengineer said:By using a directional facility WINS puts a signal into NYC which is much more intense than a non directional 50 KW signal would. WINS, in it's lobe aimed at NYC, produces almost 5.5 volts signal at 1 km. distance! It would take over 100 KW to produce the same signal intensity using a non directional antenna.
Being at the middle of the dial is already a minus for WINS. It needs all the signal help it can get to compete with the 50s on the lower part of the band.
1L6E6VHF said:taylorengineer said:By using a directional facility WINS puts a signal into NYC which is much more intense than a non directional 50 KW signal would. WINS, in it's lobe aimed at NYC, produces almost 5.5 volts signal at 1 km. distance! It would take over 100 KW to produce the same signal intensity using a non directional antenna.
Being at the middle of the dial is already a minus for WINS. It needs all the signal help it can get to compete with the 50s on the lower part of the band.
Not to mention the abysmal soil conductivity in much of the New York City area. Typical soil conductivity may be about 4 μS/m, with 30 μS/m being excellent (found in some parts of the Great Plains - which is why it is said that KFYR - a 5kW station, not a 50kW, has the largest daytime groundwave coverage of any US station). Manhattan and parts of other boroughs have 1 μS/m - which means, during the day, that AMs there can't get out worth schist (except over the ocean).
schmave said:1L6E6VHF said:Not to mention the abysmal soil conductivity in much of the New York City area. Typical soil conductivity may be about 4 μS/m, with 30 μS/m being excellent (found in some parts of the Great Plains - which is why it is said that KFYR - a 5kW station, not a 50kW, has the largest daytime groundwave coverage of any US station). Manhattan and parts of other boroughs have 1 μS/m - which means, during the day, that AMs there can't get out worth schist (except over the ocean).
Is that because it's so paved and built up? Or would it be a 1 anyway?
Schroedingers Cat said:I predict that the mountaintop gets a good signal if you can see the transmitting tower of the station.
Schroedingers Cat said:What contour did KFYR use to demonstrate that it had the largest coverage area in the country? Was it 0.5 mV/m or 0.1 mV/m? KFI or WMAQ/WSCR would have the 0.1 mV/m as the service areas as Class Is/Class As, whereas KFYR's service area would be 0.5 mV/m as Class B. It would just about have to have been the 0.1 mV/m for all, or 0.5 mV/m for all. Can't imagine that KFYR's 0.5 mV/m contour area was bigger than WMAQ's 0.1 mV/m contour area.
Schroedingers Cat said:What contour did KFYR use to demonstrate that it had the largest coverage area in the country? Was it 0.5 mV/m or 0.1 mV/m? KFI or WMAQ/WSCR would have the 0.1 mV/m as the service areas as Class Is/Class As, whereas KFYR's service area would be 0.5 mV/m as Class B. It would just about have to have been the 0.1 mV/m for all, or 0.5 mV/m for all. Can't imagine that KFYR's 0.5 mV/m contour area was bigger than WMAQ's 0.1 mV/m contour area.