This is something I have not experienced before.
I found that I am living and working almost smack dab in the middle of a deep null from the fifty-kilowatt WHFS on 1010, about fifty miles away.
The interesting is that their null seems to be deepest on the horizon, but not so deep at high angles.
Throughout the morning and late afternoon, I hear the station fading in and out, sometimes with phase cancelation from the groundwave, and sometimes just plain solid.
If the null were deeper or if the groundwave were not there, I think they would be fairly listenable during those hours.
Is it fair to say that mediumwave stations are less directional or have somewhat different patterns at high takeoff angles than they do along the ground?
I found that I am living and working almost smack dab in the middle of a deep null from the fifty-kilowatt WHFS on 1010, about fifty miles away.
The interesting is that their null seems to be deepest on the horizon, but not so deep at high angles.
Throughout the morning and late afternoon, I hear the station fading in and out, sometimes with phase cancelation from the groundwave, and sometimes just plain solid.
If the null were deeper or if the groundwave were not there, I think they would be fairly listenable during those hours.
Is it fair to say that mediumwave stations are less directional or have somewhat different patterns at high takeoff angles than they do along the ground?