“Baffling” and downright ------ [you fill in the blanks] – especially given the situation that WKLU is a high-value facility in a large and very-competitive market where many eyes are peeking and test instruments abound. I learned long-ago that “over-power” accusations can be as common as a bully in grade-school. I know this – because I’ve
made AND
suffered them myself

...So I ask under the presumption that one is compliant until caught and proven guilty: Might WKLU innocently-have an exceptional signal from a well-optimized and recently-built facility?
Possibly, this discourse would benefit from a competent FM engineer’s experience [I am NOT one]. I become a bit inquisitive when I consider the following observation [but likely-lacking a fully-scientific foundation]: Similar-class WTLC-FM on 106.7 from its Riley Tower perch several miles eastward from WKLU’s Eagle Creek location, “meets its Maker” in far-west Henry County—and with NO assistance from co/adjacent-channel interference. Despite the omnipresence of Class B co-channel WKRQ on 101.9 in Cincinnati, the WKLU signal outmarches that of WTLC-FM by nearly
20-miles on an eastward trek along I-70... Tack-on the additional 5 [or-so]-miles that separate Riley Towers from Eagle Creek, and
that adds up to at least a TWENTY-FIVE-MILE ADVANTAGE for WKLU
This goes WELL-BEYOND the typical difference between a Class A that’s “lucky” and one that is less-so! In the interest of furthering this discussion while preserving anonymity [and “
innocence”], let’s just say a certain operator with a licensed ERP of 4.7kw into 2 bays, once purchased a new Harris FM transmitter with a TPO of 7kw [understandable and justifiable given the CP]. For no other reason than to
make sure he was getting his money’s-worth, that operator fired-up his shiny new rig at 7kw [“
temporarily” of course ;D]... During this two-day transmitter “stress test” at 2.3kw ABOVE licensed power, said operator observed a
negligible gain in geographic coverage—about
2-3 miles along an interstate highway. Power was quickly reduced, and the station remained compliant for the utter-reason that it had very-little to gain at the possible expense of just an infraction that the FCC may only consider “
misdemeanor” in nature.
So comes the
$168,000.00 question [that figure is a 17-year-old NAL slapped-on a 3kw Class A running their
10kw rig into 4-bays for
over two years—an act considered by the FCC to be clearly premeditated and “
felonious”]... HOW MANY MORE watts would WKLU HAVE to crank-out to gain
20-25 miles down an interstate? ...I’d assume that transmitter would sport such a flagrant excess that when discovered—would invite a near-indefensible charge of premeditation and correspondingly-large NAL—IF their lucky. In the alleged situation, could they be facing a far-more drastic action... License revocation? If so, YES—“baffling” and
DOWNRIGHT STUPID!