MichaelP said:Many years ago I was able to listen to 107.9 clear to New Castle before it dropped. But that was in the days before "I-Block". I even got WMMS in a Mc Donald's parking lot off the 422 bypass on the south side of New Castle. Again that too was before "HD" Radio.OhioMediaWatch said:danikayser84 said:Both Z107.9 and Kiss 96.1 (if you're willing to put up with hearing Carly Rae Jepsen or Gotye 20 times in order to hear Drake or Nicki Minaj) are just a bit too far for Youngstown, I think... could the Urban continue on one of the AMs maybe with a translator in the future, anyone think of that?
I did, three messages above yours.
Don't know if Tim Martz would be interested, and don't know if anyone else could pull off the FM translator combo. I wouldn't be surprised to, say, hear 1500 put in more music...but it's an AM daytimer. (I don't know what their music mix is now, if any...last I kept track, they were running the Syndication One urban talkers for the most part.) And Bernard is not going to go after a companion translator while they're just keeping the transmitter warm.
Z gets well into the northern part of the market...remember, it's Way Out East of Cleveland in Newbury, a relatively short run down U.S. 422 (off Ohio 87) from Warren. Not so much in Mahoning County.
Kiss 96.1 barely makes it to New Castle. Of course, 95.9 is the local Kiss for the market, but I have no idea how urban they lean.
Back in the 60's & 70's 107.9 in it's WNOB/WELW/WDMT years operated with 70,000 watts and it did indeed cover a lot of ground back then. It's coverage ran from Erie and New Castle in the east to around Sandusky in the west, down to Mansfield and north into Ontario. I am not sure just when they reduced the power (I believe it was sometime in the 80's) on that station but I believed it had something to do with issues with 107.3. Hopefully someone here will remember just what happened to cause that.