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XEAO-AM 910 Mexicali

Wikipedia lists them at 250 Watts as does the International Radio Club Of America's Mexican AM list. But the man who compiles/edits that list, Tim Hall in San Diego, who knows a thing or two.. says back in the 90s, Mexican AM's who had less than 1KW but asked for the upgrade pretty much got it. The downfall here Tim says is that often times, there was no notification of any kind of updating of official records.

Is XEAO actually 250 Watts or could they be using 1000 Watts? Not that locally or even skywave wise would 1kw vs 250 Watts make a huge difference.
 
Wikipedia lists them at 250 Watts as does the International Radio Club Of America's Mexican AM list. But the man who compiles/edits that list, Tim Hall in San Diego, who knows a thing or two.. says back in the 90s, Mexican AM's who had less than 1KW but asked for the upgrade pretty much got it. The downfall here Tim says is that often times, there was no notification of any kind of updating of official records.

Is XEAO actually 250 Watts or could they be using 1000 Watts? Not that locally or even skywave wise would 1kw vs 250 Watts make a huge difference.
According to IFT's website, they're broadcasting at 250 watts. The coverage map shows their coverage being blasted towards Imperial County.
 
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