It would wipe a bunch of stations off the map if it fired up non-directionalAs cyberdad mentioned, PJB used to be an easy catch in the midwest years ago, but I haven't heard the newer version.
It would wipe a bunch of stations off the map if it fired up non-directionalAs cyberdad mentioned, PJB used to be an easy catch in the midwest years ago, but I haven't heard the newer version.
I was thinking of commenting....It might be a bit late now. But my original post was about an AM radio station in the Augusta market. It has its daytime transmitter in one state and its nighttime transmitter in another... One was in South Carolina and one was in Georgia.
So it wasn't just about stations that have their transmitter location in a different state. Most NYC AM stations have their transmitter locations in NJ. But not in TWO different stations, depending on night signal or day signal.
Yeah, you pass that tower on the bridgeI can think of many TV stations in Michigan which have their TL in a different COUNTY than the City of License. There is one TV station in Toledo, OH, WLMB Channel 40 (operates on physical Channel 5 presently), which has it's TL two miles into Michigan. It was in an out of the way location to be more than 20 miles from WUPW Channel 36 due to the UHF Taboos (Intermodulation Restriction for 2, 3, 4, and 5 channels). It ended up in an area which was quite a ways from Toledo.
Did anyone mention WCKY Cincinnati, OH, having its TL in Covington, KY, the original COL and origin of the call sign, similar to WIND, originally in Gary, INDiana?
I also don't know if anyone mentioned WZIP/WGRI 1050 Cincinnati, OH, having its transmitter in Covington, KY, along I-75, a few blocks South of the Ohio River.