Noted an interesting problem for KKOB while on our way out of Santa Fe Tuesday 
morning, where we'd spent the night with a brother-in-law on our way back from 
Arizona. A dominant cyclical sound from what appeared to be a subaudible 
heterodyne, presumably from the synchronized 230-watt transmitter on the west 
side of Santa Fe. (NRC log says night-time only, but FCC data base shows as 
unlimited.) I counted the cycles ... 120 in 60 seconds, indicating, if my fuzzy 
understanding of SAHes is accurate, that the Santa Fe transmitter and the 
Albuquerque transmitter are 2 Hz off. It was extremely annoying, and and 
carried as far south as milepost 277 on US 285, about 25 miles from the Santa 
Fe transmitter.

I had heard a similar effect 25 to 30 years ago when I was at WMIX-940, weather 
knocked off the daytime transmitter, and we switched to the night-time 
facility. When the power went back on at the daytime transmitter site, the 
combination gave the same cyclical, wobbulating effect.

My SAH assumption, though, may be wrong, if the effect was caused by the 
difference in distance between the two transmitters. Engineering knowledgeable 
people may set me straight on this.

The bottom line, though, would seem to be that the product of the two 
transmitters would make KKOB's programming unusable within a 25-mile radius of 
the Santa Fe transmitter.
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