radioman148 said:
BRNout said:
Lkeller said:
anotherguy said:
In the 80's there was an attempt to bring back XERF at 250,000 watts with a CCM format, but it was eventually turned into a Dollar a Holler station. It didn't last long though.
XERB's transmitter was in Rosarita Beach - near Tijuana. Wolfman Jack recorded his shows in Los Angeles, and the tapes were driven across the border to be played at the transmitter site.
I don't know about XERF, but I seriously doubt XER
B (1090) pumped out anything more than 50,000 watts. I would think anything more powerful would have obliterated KNX at 1070, and KRLA at 1110 - but both of those stations had strong signals at night.
50K watt stations on AM clear channels at night can often be heard clearly for hundreds, or even thousands of miles in the station's directional path. I'm not clear why they would need 250K watts.
If memory serves, XERB had a directional signal that was designed to serve areas north of the border and to null anything to the south. So, even if they were limited to 50 kw (and it was probably more), the effective power streamed into the US was probably more like 100 kw. Being 20 kHz away from the likes of KNX and KRLA at that distance would still have been sufficient in the days before IBOC. My understanding was that XERB really cranked out the juice during their heyday and were heard clearly every night throughout the western 1/3 of the US....well up to Seattle.
The present directional 50 kw signal of this station not only blankets San Diego, but gets into the LA basin pretty well too, during the day. They're not as impressive at night as they once were though. This leads me to believe that they were cranking out more like 100 kw back in the 60s.
I was in LA a few times in the late 60s and heard XERB pretty well on a small transistor radio during the day even with KNX & KRLA on either side. I suspect you may be right about their power.
At one point, I remember XERB talking about their coverage of "17 western states, Mexico and Canada". Pretty sure that was hype. But Baja to British Columbia and as far east as the Four Corners (Arizona/Utah/New Mexico/Colorado) is probably about right. That would have given them 11 states (California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado and New Mexico).
50kw daytime is more than you need to get a good signal into L.A. from Rosarita Beach.
The difference in night coverage between the 60s and now may be less about the power at the transmitter than in degradation of the AM band. Every single one of those backlit plastic business signs is a flourescent...generating interference with AM. Only gas stations and fast foods had 'em in '69. Now they're everywhere.
And I'll bet XEPRS' owners over the years have spent somewhere around zero on maintaining the ground radials under the towers...so there's 40 years worth of slow decay.
My bet: 50kw then, 50kw now. But like most things from four decades ago, it buys you a lot less today.
---Michael Hagerty
PS to Llew: XERB actually changed the calls to XEPRS before Wolf bailed out. His farewell show on 4/15/72 was on XEPRS. The flip happened sometime in 1971.
http://cgi.ebay.com/XEPRS-R&B-Radio-LA-Tijuana-Soul-Music-Survey-12-24-71_W0QQitemZ180342969217QQcmdZViewItemQQimsxZ20090403?IMSfp=TL090403158007r3047