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Author Topic: The Top 20 U.S. Locations to Scan the FM Dial? RW rip, but not quite.  (Read 57 times)

Offline ThaDood

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https://www.radioworld.com/tech-and-gear/nicks-signal-spot/the-top-20-u-s-locations-to-scan-the-fm-dial     Ya know, one of the neat, but seemingly useless features, put into the digital PLL tuned car stereo, and even a few home stereo tuners, is the SEEK feature. Why??? It may seem like a good idea, but it usually only stops at the very strongest signals that this feature comes upon. Manually scanning, and you may find a ton of full-quieting stations totally listenable that a SEEK feature will simply ignore. So, it's a feature on my stereos that I just never use. However, I suspect that we can all find locations where the FM tuner will never find anything in SEEK mode. Heck, in 1982, with the analog AC Delco stereo in an 82' Pontiac Phoenix, I tuned the whole FM band up in  Lyman Run State Park, PA, and found nothing! In the late 1990's Galeton, PA had a Family Life Network station come on-air, and even today, that maybe the only station that you could get there. Maybe, Coudersport, PA's 96.7FM WFRM, but even that might be too weak to SEEK. OK folks, what FM RF deserts have you come across. There a whole sloth of Alaska that there's got to be no FM stations received. The Adirondack Mountains is believable, somewhat, but even there, you could get stations from Syracuse, Utica / Rome, Plattsburg / Burlington, Ottawa, Montreal, and even Ogdenburg. There are FM stations there, like Lake Placid and Tupper Lake.  The National Quiet Zone for Greenbank, WV??? If I remember, there were several FM stations receivable there, albeit not too strong. So, this dude's Top 20 list could easily be a Top 100.
“I am often asked how radio works. Well, you see, wire telegraphy
is like a very long cat. You yank his tail in New York and he
meows in Los Angeles. Do you understand this? Now, radio is
exactly the same, except that there is no cat.”
-Attributed to Albert Einstein, but I ripped it from the latest Splatter .PDF March 2025 issue.

 

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