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Edited on Thu Aug-10-06 11:12 PM by LastDemocratInSC
Your "perfect storm" is the result of 4 different things adding together:
1 - The Air America station is WCHL in Chapel Hill. Its broadcast frequency is 1360 KHz, which is twice the frequency of the interfering station, WPTF in Raleigh, whose frequency is 680.
2 - WCHL broadcasts at 5,000 watts during the day and 1,000 watts during the night (weak compared to WPTF). WPTF broadcasts at 50,000 watts at all times (the max power allowed in the United States).
3 - Only the very best radios can reject interference between nearby stations under the above conditions. Car radios aren't the very best available.
4 - WCHL's weak transmitter site is north and east of Chapel Hill. WPTF's beastly transmitter is in ... Cary ... where you experience the problem.
WPTF's transmitter is located near the intersection of East Chatham Street and Maynard Road in Cary.
It's unlikely that anyone ever receives WCHL well in Cary, at any time of the day.
WCHL is licensed as a local station while WPTF is licensed as a regional station. If you're in Chapel Hill and can't hear WCHL because of WPTF you've got a case with the FCC. The same is true if you're in Cary and can't hear WPTF because of WCHL, but that's not likely to happen.
Physics and math are working against you, unfortunately.
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