Notes from my trip to Santa Fe NM and back to Enid for a week in August, Nissan 
Sentra 2004 caradio, a lot better than my previous ones. FCC AM and FM queries 
have been checked in most cases; also referenced NRC AM Log 2007, now one year 
old, and possibly some calls or other info outdated now. Latest FM Atlas 
sometimes consulted, now 3 years old. All dates and times strictly UT! 
Rearranged by frequency order, altho continuity would be better in chrono order 
--- 

640, 2308 Aug 19, WWLS Moore OK was still audible into NE NM around Clayton, 
with call-in, probably sports talk, what else? Their IBOC was a nuisance 
further east but maybe not this far. 

760, 2134 Aug 19, ID as ``Colorado`s Progressive Radio``, Randi Rhodes show but 
with constant picket-fence breaks in modulation! Is no one paying attention? 
That`s 50 kW KKZN Thornton, in NRC AM Log 2007 as ``Boulder`s Progressive 
Radio``; maybe they use both. Nice to be getting toward the end of OK where we 
can axually hear something other than the far right on commercial AM radio! 
Signal does not compare to 50 kW KOA (W of Guymon OK on US 412)

790, 2123 Aug 26, Roger Miller singing ``K.C. Star``, mixing with talk station 
at 152/minute SAH = 2.53 Hz. Music from K-XXX, Colby KS, talk from KFYO Lubbock 
TX (West of Boise City OK on US 412)

860, 2127 Aug 26, no doubt KPAN Hereford TX was the station bothered by IBOC 
from KOA-850 Denver, in the daytime (W of Boise City OK on US 412)

1040, 2130 Aug 26, medical talk or infomercial, 1-800-395-1904, Dr Pinkus` 
Ultimate Health Care, then closing show ``Discoveries in Health`` with Chris 
McKay, from the KCBR Info Center, 2132 ``Healthline Live``. This is Monument CO 
(Colorado Springs), another strangely powered 15 kW station. But to me, KCBR 
will always be ``the Voice of America station in Delano, California, signing 
off``

1210, KGYN Guymon OK, we drive right past E of town on US 412, with its three 
towers in a straight line aimed at Philadelphia, but might as well be one for 
often running ND at night. At 2057 Aug 19 near the site, I was getting 
IBOC-like noise on 1140, and a match on 1280, but the latter obscured by 
Liberal KS on 1270. So KGYN puts out spurs plus and minus 70 kHz. For a few 
miles along US 412, KGYN also desensitizes the entire MW band on caradio with 
its 10 kW. It will be a relief if they ever manage to move this to OKC, but a 
loss of local radio for the Panhandle. A pickup was parked next to the shack 
with call letters on it. On the way back we passed it again and took a photo of 
the three towers and the shack.

1340, 2300+ Aug 19, at Clayton NM, we started looking for KSSR Santa Rosa NM, 
whose activity has been in question. It is not currently on NRC`s silent 
stations list, and FCC shows it still licensed. We were hearing at least two 
1340 stations, one of which was KVOT Taos NM, another progressive station, now 
with Rachel Maddow show on Air America, the other ``Sports Radio 1340`` making 
a rumbling het, and fading up at 2305 as skywave may have been starting to kick 
in, west Texas forecast, 1-866-290-6868 ad about credit. KKAM Lubbock is the 
one that fits. 

Further into NM on US 412 kept looking for signs of KSSR, but KVOT improved as 
we got closer to it; at 2332 PSA for Albuquerque Museum i.a., mentioning Taos, 
more Maddow. (BTW, Rachel is getting her own show on MSNBC following Countdown 
at 0100 UT starting September 9. Can`t say we are surprised, as her star has 
been rising as a frequent contributor and sub-host on Countdown, but what 
becomes of Dan Abrams, Verdict? It`s already gone for elexion special Aug 30. 
And will she keep doing her Air America show despite the pay differential?)

It turned out we did not make it to my old hometown of Santa Rosa on this trip, 
but the closest point was on I-25 near Las Vegas, US 84 exit at 1950 Aug 25, 
and there was still no KSSR to be heard, so I am confident it was off. Nor 
could I hear Santa Rosa on 95.9, but did not expect to from there as it has 
always been QRP along I-40, audible only within a few miles of the town. At 
1934 Aug 25, 1340 bore ``Northern New Mexico`s progressive talk, KVOT, the 
Voice of Taos``. This frequency was reactivated in Taos a few years ago after 
several years of silence since KKIT closed (named for Kit Carson). See DXLD 
5-177 for our previous report about Santa Rosa and much more, under USA.

1520, KOKC, OKC, 2315 Aug 19, sports talk, uncertain if remnants of groundwave, 
or skywave had started. WWLS 640 also heard a few minutes earlier (W of Clayton 
NM on US 412)

1530, 2317 Aug 19, ``Legends 15-30, KCMN`` Colorado Springs. Live DJ with 
``Forgotten 45s`` oldies such as Aznavour on ``your drive home`` (? I am 
nowhere near home and getting further away by the minute), long pauses between 
cuts. NRC AM Log 2007 shows this one with odd power of 15 kW. Another good 
station for oldies, tho probably syndicated, is 93.9 Ratón, KRTN (west of 
Clayton NM on US 412)

1550, 1951 Aug 19, norteña music featuring accordion, atop another station. 
1957 announcement talking over music sounded like ``Está escuchando --- sucia`` 
or that`s what it sounded like, sucia meaning feminine dirty! No ID at TOH, no 
announcements at all until 2014 as I suspect the DJ had stepped out for a smoke 
break, then ``La Potencia, 15-50, KDCC``, i.e. Dodge City KS, and the other one 
with a SAH of about 6 Hz would be Canyon TX` listed KZRK. Both are only 1 kW.

1570, back in Enid around 2000 Aug 28, found new talking house at 1330 West 
Elm, low het but not sure if off-frequency or on their loop. Woman extolling 
house virtues, and like others we have heard here, also extolling the 
talking-house concept. Range 2 or 4 blox only, and by downtown Enid fortunately 
inaudible, so we can hear weakly standards from KZLI Catoosa. But the next-door 
neighbors are doubtless deprived of XERF at night until it`s sold.

1590, 1950 Aug 19, a slow SAH of about 0.5 Hz between KWEY Weatherford OK, and 
KVGB Great Bend KS, the latter atop with ID as ``AM 15-90, KVGB, The Talk of 
the Town`` (W of Woodward OK on US 412)

1610, 2300 Aug 19 at Clayton NM, no sign of any TIS on this, 530 or any other 
MW frequency. I believe there had been some speculation that one was active 
here.

1660, 0038 UT Wed Aug 27, baseball game, and Royals mentioned, heard from near 
Woodward OK. Dominant signal and I figured it had to be KXTR Kansas City 
departing from its classical format, but not so sure after further research. 
Royals website says 610 is the flagship, except on Sundays 980, but I believe 
all these are commonly owned, so 1660 sometimes carries BB instead? KXTR 
website has no info about its own programming after the morning hours, but 
nothing about baseball. If not KXTR, must be KRZI Waco or maybe KQWB Fargo, 
both sports format.

88.1 and 88.9, 2106 Aug 19 in Guymon OK, is occupied by a KHYM gospel-huxter 
network translator, and High Plains Public Radio translator is still on 88.9 
with 250 watts. When KHYM gets its non-translator going on 88.9, HPPR will 
switch to 88.1 with 1 kW, but not yet. 

At 2106 Aug 19, we could not help but notice that during NPR ATC, the 88.9 
translator was running 7.5 seconds ahead of KTOT 89.5; why? Probably one with a 
deliberate delay to match `HD`, and the other not. FCC shows licensee of some 
HPPR relays as Kanza Society, Inc., others as Top O` Texas Educational 
Broadcasting Foundation; why?

88.1: KGOU at OU in Norman has been planning a full-power relay at Woodward. I 
thought they had a CP, but FCC now shows an modified application 7/31/08 for 
88.1, only 23.4 kW non-direxional. Still not on the air, and when it is, 88.3 
may have to go:

88.3, 1930 Aug 19, Mission Network News, referring to Beaver OK, KHYM ID. 
Nearest station is K202DC, Shattuck, 230 watts, Great Plains Christian Radio, 
same owner as KHYM which is 103.9 Copeland KS, hub of a regional gospel-huxter 
network. I had previously assumed this was in Woodward. (W of Woodward OK on US 
412)

88.3, BTW, I didn`t hear it, but I see in FCC FM Query that KTOT/HPPR now has a 
licensed translator in Elk City OK:
K202AG 202 D FX 88.3 MHz LIC ELK CITY OK US BLFT-20060711ACQ - 72169 0.038 kW 
0. m 
I only wish they would put one in Enid where we have NO local public radio, 
despite much larger population than many little towns with such translators.

89.5, KTOT Spearman TX, the full-power HPPR relay which reaches as far east as 
Woodward, and well past Guymon to the west. In many spots it was a toss-up 
whether it or a closer translator would provide best reception, or for that 
matter 91.1 Garden City, KANZ, the home station. In the fringe area of KTOT 
Spearman TX around Woodward OK, bothered by same NPR programming with an echo 
from a second 89.5 station, probably remnants of KHCD Salina KS. In Enid we 
have the same problem on 89.1 between KMUW Wichita KS and KYCU Clinton OK.

89.5, 2344 Aug 19, NPR ATC mixing with Radio Reader. Should be KENW Portales NM 
direct, and KTOT HPPR Spearman TX, no longer very close, but RR matches latter 
schedule at 6:30 pm. KTSC Pueblo CO ruled out as a student station (US 412 in 
NM, mile 45)

90.1, 2308 Aug 19 in Clayton NM I was hearing a KJIL translator – another 
gospel-huxter network originating in Kansas, but this must have been the one in 
nearby Felt OK, K211CM. They have a CP for another one on 90.1, the other side 
of Boise City at Keyes OK, K214CH.

90.1, 2142 Aug 25, religious station but audio cuts out irregularly about 10x 
per minute. Is no one paying attention? Heard from Philmont Scout Ranch, S of 
Cimarrón NM. First thought was KRDR Red River NM, not too far away crowflyingly 
but range very limited by mountain blockage, and not supposed to be 
gospel-huxtering. Apparently instead is AFA translator in Ratón NM, K211CE, 250 
watts, minus 74m antenna. A Google search on mentioned `New Tribes Mission` 
90.1 hit an Oct 2001 newsletter of Answers Update, showing its program Answers 
with Ken Ham carried on a translator on 90.1 in Ratón. Thought I heard a 
callsign like KFRG or something phonetically similar. KFRG is a CBS station on 
95.1 in San Bernardino CA, so does not compute.

90.3, 2204 Aug 19, HPPR // 89.5 KTOT and synchro with it. K212EN, Elkhart KS, 
another border town, 250 watts with a CP for 205 (W of Guymon on US 412)

90.5, HPPR has a CP for a translator in Hooker OK, halfway between Guymon OK 
and Liberal KS on US 54, 30 kW, 123 meters. That should fill some gaps and make 
nearby translators unnecessary, including Guymon?

90.7, for months, KSFR Santa Fe NM, public radio, had been simulcasting on this 
its original frequency and 101.1 COL White Rock as KSFQ, acquired from a 
failing commercial broadcaster. Now KSFR is on 101.1 only, and 90.7 has a 
gospel huxter. Per FCC, 90.7 now has the KSFQ calls with 3 kW in Santa Fe, and 
same operator, so-called Educational Media Foundation also runs KQRI on 90.7 in 
Belén on the other side of Albuquerque. Inside the city of Santa Fe itself, 
90.7 remains a better signal than 101.1, q.v.

91.1, KEDP, Las Vegas NM. On many previous visits, the station has been 
missing, perhaps silent summers, but this time it was heard around 1500 UT Aug 
21. New Mexico Highlands University also has applications in for stations in 
other towns, some of which are MX. KEDP has never amounted to much as a little 
student station, but perhaps NMHU has plans for some more significant 
broadcasting services. FCC FM Query shows these:

Class  MHz  City         kW ERP  HAAT m
C      88.7 Milan        16.5    845 [near Grants]
C2     89.3 Newcomb       0.65   698 [S of Shiprock on US `666`]
C3     89.5 Española      5      180
A      89.9 Ratón         0.38   -86
C2     90.3 Romeroville  50      -41 [near Las Vegas]
A      91.3 Clayton       4.5    116
A      91.3 Clovis        6       96

91.3: In Clayton NM I was hearing a religious station on 91.3. Per FCC FM 
query, it`s currently a translator of La Promesa Foundation, K217CM with 140 
watts at 74m, but there are three MX apps for non-translators on the frequency, 
one by the same foundation, one by the notorious gospel-huxter network, AFA, 
and the other by NM Highlands University (HQ: Las Vegas; see above). Naturally, 
I am rooting for the latter.

91.7, before 2200 Aug 19, rock music, presumed the real KPSU at Panhandle State 
University, Goodwell OK, active (W of Guymon on US 412 closest to Goodwell)

91.9, HPPR has a CP in Guymon for 200 watts, in addition to 88.1. Surely this 
one would be ruled out due to 91.7 Goodwell?

92.7, KKBS Guymon OK, billboard in town shows second frequency 100.5: that`s 
K263AQ Liberal KS, 250 watts, and not audible in Guymon itself.

93.5: In Clayton NM, and for just a few miles around, one can hear the KENW 
translator on 93.5, K228DP, listed as 170 watts, but only 78 meters AAT, 
minuscule coverage compared to // 106.1 atop Sierra Grande, with lower power, 
and I would have thought the 93.5 range does not even justify the listed power 
and height.

93.5, ``Sunny 93-5``, classic hits, 2340 Aug 19, at mile 50 of US 412 in NM, W 
of Clayton, way beyond the range of the Clayton 93.5 KENW translator. The only 
``Sunny 93-5`` anywhere in the west I can find is KSNN in St George, SW corner 
of Utah, but that`s way too far for groundwave across the Rockies, and too 
close for Es. Is there anything nearer?

95.7, 1959 Aug 25, at Las Vegas NM, was hearing LPFM station there, KLYN-LP, 
seems with rightwing talk mentioning http://www.myspace.com/KLYN957 which also 
calls it: 

The Voice of Las Vegas, and "Las Vegas' newest Christian radio station with 
Flare!" --- Male 100 years old, LAS VEGAS, New Mexico, United States. We are on 
the air 24 hours! Coming Soon: Friday and Saturday Night "Cruise Show" Las 
Vegas’ most diverse Radio Station, Playing: Christian Worship, Contemporary, 
HipHop, R&B, Rap, lots of Spanish, Rock, Alternative Rock, Ska, and Reggeaton 
[sic]! FCC shows: 0.003 kW 169.8 m THE ROCK CHRISTIAN OUTREACH, i.e. 3 watts. 
Solid signal in town. 
 
101.1, KSFR White Rock-Santa Fe, ex-90.7. The move is now complete, and 
coverage S and W of Santa Fe is supposedly improved greatly, but it certainly 
is not any better to the N and E on I-25. Furthermore, in Santa Fe itself, 
trying to listen on a walkman, I found 101.1 breaking up and getting QRM from 
something else. I listen to it a lot more in Enid by webcast where the RF 
change makes no difference. See also 90.7.

105.7, 1938 Aug 19, classical mixing with talk, and // 89.5. This is the High 
Plains Public Radio outlet in Amarillo, KJJP, another of those fire-sale 
ex-commercial FMs snapped up by PR. 43 kW with a 1 kW backup, says FCC. 
Interesting that in OK and nearby TX we now have two public radios on 105.7, 
the other being KROU Spencer/OKC, relaying KGOU Norman, which have been 
relegated to the commercial band from their outset, since OU foolishly sold off 
its heritage WNAD 640. (W of Woodward on US 412)

106.1, the little translator of KENW Portales with a great site atop Sierra 
Grande near Des Moines NM (COL), K291AD, only 116 watts, but huge coverage from 
611 meters above average terrain and 2670 m above mean sea level. We first hear 
it east of Boise City OK, where it is very much needed as we are losing access 
to HPPR via the various translators and relays in KS, OK and TX. Unfortunately, 
KENW still runs this `beautiful music` format until 4 pm weekdays, so none of 
the NPR newstalk shows, just news on the hour, and 2-minute features every 
quarter hour, such as Earth & Sky, etc., etc. Later from the rim of Capulín 
Volcano we had a clear shot for some photos at max zoom of the K291AD and other 
towers atop Sierra Grande across the valley. AFAIK none of the others are for 
broadcast stations.

FCC TV Query does have an application for a channel 6 digital on Sierra Grande, 
http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/tvq?list=0&facid=137605

KENW has an application for 3 kW on 88.5 from slightly different coördinates on 
Sierra Grande, I suppose eventually to replace 106.1. There is also a CP for an 
82 kW commercial station, KHOD on 105.3, from exactly the same coordinates as 
88.5. Did not know about 105.3 while in the area so did not check whether it is 
already on the air.

In western Cimarrón County, OK, and just over the border in Union County NM on 
US 412, was hearing rapid clix on certain MW frequencies, obscuring weak 
broadcast stations, such as 1390, 1380, 1370, 1360, 1350, 1330 and various 
spots as low as 1070. These were no doubt harmonix of the Boise City OK LORAN-C 
station. Fortunately there were some open spots such as 1500 and especially 
1340 where I wanted to hear KSSR Santa Rosa NM if it was on, q.v. above. 

All about LORAN-C at Boise City, except WTFK??? at 
http://www.loran-history.info/boise_city/boise_city.htm  
Including a satellite photo of it. The proudly displayed coordinates are 
36-30-20.783 N, 103-53-59.487 W which puts it just NW of the very small town of 
Felt OK, rather than Boise City. The clix were no longer heard by the time we 
got to Clayton NM.

A strange pole with antennas on it, not too high, and not of the usual 
cellphone appearance, on the N side of US 412, just W of mile 31 in NM between 
Clayton and Springer. Something to check closer next time.

Near the wind farm west of Woodward, I noticed annoying whines on certain FM 
ranges extending 1 or 2 channels above and below: 91.3, 95.5, 99.4, 103.6, 
107.3. The windmills are some distance from the road, so suspected this was 
coincidental, car-generated, and uncovered due to absence of local broadcast 
signals in this area. Whine still heard on 95.5 in Clayton NM area (Glenn 
Hauser, DX LISTENING DIGEST)


      

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