I can get KNBR faintly in the daytime, and most of the year at
night, but for some reason, in the winter, it seems to be skipping
right over me. After midnight, when cx settle down to basic night
cx, it's dependable, but between 6 and 11 PM, it can really be a
crapshoot. Some nights it's rock solid, but others, it's just way
down and being covered by slop from KBOI. Who can understand this
propagation thing?
It would be nice if I could ever get something underneath it, but
there never is.
--- On Fri, 7/17/09, Patrick Martin <mwdxer@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
From: Patrick Martin <mwdxer@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [IRCA] Regarding West Coast powerhouse stations
To: "Mailing list for the International Radio Club of America" <irca@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
Date: Friday, July 17, 2009, 9:45 PM
Len,
I am a bit surprised you don't get KNBR like a ton of bricks. Here
it is
rough to get by. I had a time phasing KNBR down enough to get KBRW,
even
with the antenna aimed NW. KGO has 200KW ERP to the North, so the KGO
signal does not surprise me. I hear both KNBR & KGO year around 24/7.
73,
Patrick
Patrick Martin
KGED QSL Manager
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