I'm asking all those out here who follow AM radio to post their "favorite" AM radio directional patterns, those that provide highly effective whilst doing their important task of protecting other stations from interference.
Sadly, my candidate for favorite was razed more than 20 years ago (the station still lives on 92.7 FM, and one tall tower stands holding their FM antenna high in the sky, on the same land that once held five smaller ones: CHYR, 710, Leamington, Ontario (now CJSP with country**)
http://fccinfo.com/CMDProEngine.php...bSearchType=Appl&sAppIDNumber=495266&sHours=D
note how this array effectively protects everything from dead west, though all southerly directions, all the way to just north of East, whilst delivery 90% or more of its peak power (about the equivalent of 30 kW using a 10 kW transmitter) over more than 70° beamwidth and at least 25% of peak power over a 115° swath.
I grew up on Detroit's East Side and received an excellent signal from "Cheer", never knowing that its signal was near nothing anywhere south of Detroit.
Compare this to the pattern of the six-tower night pattern of WWJ (950)
http://fccinfo.com/CMDProEngine.php...SearchType=Appl&sAppIDNumber=1155695&sHours=N
Of course, the beam is narrower, necessarily so, but peak power is only in an infinitely small point right around 353° - it's actually weaker at 352° and 354°!
**contrary to what you may have read, CHYR did not move from 710 to 96.7, where the CHYR call is currently heard. CHYR moved from 710 to 92.7, still with an AC format, but switched to country later. Today's CHYR (96.7) came on many years after CHYR 92.7 went country. Its call changed to CJSP around the same time 96.7 CHYR was lit.
Sadly, my candidate for favorite was razed more than 20 years ago (the station still lives on 92.7 FM, and one tall tower stands holding their FM antenna high in the sky, on the same land that once held five smaller ones: CHYR, 710, Leamington, Ontario (now CJSP with country**)
http://fccinfo.com/CMDProEngine.php...bSearchType=Appl&sAppIDNumber=495266&sHours=D
note how this array effectively protects everything from dead west, though all southerly directions, all the way to just north of East, whilst delivery 90% or more of its peak power (about the equivalent of 30 kW using a 10 kW transmitter) over more than 70° beamwidth and at least 25% of peak power over a 115° swath.
I grew up on Detroit's East Side and received an excellent signal from "Cheer", never knowing that its signal was near nothing anywhere south of Detroit.
Compare this to the pattern of the six-tower night pattern of WWJ (950)
http://fccinfo.com/CMDProEngine.php...SearchType=Appl&sAppIDNumber=1155695&sHours=N
Of course, the beam is narrower, necessarily so, but peak power is only in an infinitely small point right around 353° - it's actually weaker at 352° and 354°!
**contrary to what you may have read, CHYR did not move from 710 to 96.7, where the CHYR call is currently heard. CHYR moved from 710 to 92.7, still with an AC format, but switched to country later. Today's CHYR (96.7) came on many years after CHYR 92.7 went country. Its call changed to CJSP around the same time 96.7 CHYR was lit.