WOW!!! 79 Houses for a wireless FM Transmitter? AMAZING!!! Where I am, I would only get about 5 houses with clear reception, 11 to 21 houses for Home Theaters, and 54 houses for DX and Car Radios.
Incidentally, several years ago my dad was experimenting with one of the Ramsey FM transmitter kits (don't remember which one) and an FM dipole transmitting antenna (don't remember the details on that either but I think it was 1/2 or 1/4 wave and I think I remember it being enclosed in PVC pipe). Upon plotting the DX/Car radio range on a Google Maps image screenshotted and imported into GIMP, I do remember that range was probably about where the signal would be sinking into the noise on a walkman with the headphone antenna fully extended. We went with FM, as we were trying to provide spanish translation for bible studies / church services at the time, and the AM system we tried (one of the Ramsey kits, and a 4 foot or so (i think untuned) loop antenna) was barely getting halfway across the ~70-150-person congregation before it was seriously hampered by static, or, at night, co-channel interference (Dad said the antenna was tuned for the middle of the band, IIRC). I wonder now if we could have gotten better range by setting up a proper AM antenna system? Unfortunately though, setting up a ground radial system was completely out of the question.
If I was going to set up a wireless transmit system now (of course it would NOT be on FM), I'd be hoping for a static-free signal range on a typical walkman / portable comparable to what I've heard the range for some part 15 AMs quoted (for example pegging the RSSI(dBu),SNR(dB) meter at 63,25 at about 1 mile - a 1kW station 8.3 miles from me, reads about 57,25 at night), within about 100 feet or so I'd want it to be strong enough to
overload my Tecsun PL-380, and within about 5 feet I would like it to
overload a crystal set which has an antenna that is at most a 2-3" loopstick, loop, or wire (whichever of those 3 would be the least sensitive).