From DC to Daylight, baby! Multiple paging bases in the 35, 43, 152, 166, 450, 900 and 1200 MHz bands, dual 20 channel 800 MHz trunking public safety radio systems, at least fifty different 220 and 460 MHz business band repeaters, six cell phone providers providing "5 bar" signal strength into sub basements, a dozen Amateur Radio repeaters, point to point microwave networks, TV channels 4, 6, and 10, and an LPTV on 8, and no less than ten Class A and B FM transmitters within a 5 mile radius of Broad and High ...Arp2 wrote: ...and, with "The SuperTower" just a mile west of those buildings and WNCI's 175,000 watts coming off the top of the Nationwide building, the whole downtown area and beyond is a splattery mess.
Back to WTDA: To move 103.9's situation to the Huntington market, think about 90.7 WFGH's penetration into Ashland (this is the Tolsia High School station near Fort Gay, WV) or 107.1 Kiss FM's signal into east Huntington from Ironton. That's what NABCO is dealing with in trying to make that signal a winner.