> the 700WLW broadcast tower is literally across the street!!!
For those who don't know:
WLW was owned by Powel Crosley, refrigerators and small cars. Started at 50 Watts when that was a lot. 500, 5,000, 50,000 Watts. But Powel figured out that 50,000 Watts is "only the power of a speeding Buick" (around 33 horsepower) and commissioned a 500,000 Watt transmitter. People in Russia learned English (midwestern american) from it. People in Canada and much of the US complained loudly. Neighbors' lights dimmed on modulation peaks. By 1938 the general feeling was that 50,000 Watts should be enough for any US broadcaster, and the 500,000 Watt temporary broadcast permit was not renewed. (The experimental permit lingered into WWII, on the chance we would need a super-station for national defense.) (The transmitter was idled but not scrapped for decades; may still be there.) (The 500KW rig was driven by the 50KW rig which was still operational in 1999, though a newer 50KW was primary.)
WLW is now "only" 50,000 Watts, but 50KW AM stations have become increasingly rare. Coastal 50KWs have to beam their signals away from Europe to avoid protest. And it's a big electric bill. Repairs/replacements must be costly. And AM radio is not the cash-cow it once was. Many stations have chosen to down-size their powers.
WLW apparently still uses the Blaw-Knox tower built for 500KW use, plus two smaller towers to distort the coverage away from Canada. They get occasional coverage in at least 38 states.
I once lived in sight of the WCAU (now WPHT) 50KW rig in Moorestown when it was new. I learned a lot about radio interference in audio, but nothing about radio. ANY thing would pick-up WCAU, only the better superhets would get anything else.
50KW AM in your dooryard is a significant challenge.