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Why, like clockwork, does WFAN 660 NYC, received 500 miles west in
Central Ohio, fade away at (nowadays) 6am and later come back strong for another hour? They're strong again like a local at almost 7am now, for instance. Not just a random once-in-a-while thing, but regularly. My guess is that it must be a switch in the height of the reflecting layer somehow, but I can't construct a really consistent picture. MW always reflects, but the attenuation varies at lower levels with solar angle, sun killing off the reflected signal. It's not ``grey line'' because that path is nowhere near the direction involved. -- Ron Hardin On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
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