The translator on 101.1 FM is bad news for fans of Q101 in Berrien County.
Q101 is now completely unlistenable most of the time along I-94 in the Benton Harbor / St. Joe area. It's now a 50/50 mix of Q101's signal and this translator's signal.
Before this translator signed on, Q101 could be heard with little difficulty across that area. In the car, I could often hear it to the I-196 / I-94 junction or beyond. Now, I have to drive to at least the Bridgman exit before I can get a listenable signal from 101.1. WIRX must be loving this (not a bad station at all for a small market operation, btw. Much better than WRKR and WBFX, for example.)
I know it wasn't WGTO's intent to cause this type of interference, but I'm still ticked off about it nonetheless.
Here's hoping the planned move closer to Niles will reduce inteference to Q101 if & when it happens.
MarkW, that's the problem with all of these "drop-in" low power translators and LPFM stations. They ruin reception of higher powered but more distant stations that some of us would prefer to listen to. Case in point: WLFQ-LP wipes out Chicago's classical station WFMT for many miles. The FCC considers these LPFM's to have a usable coverage area of just a few miles, but the interference extends for 20 miles or more! I used to be able to listen to WFMT while driving around South Bend, but now my classical music is replaced by hip-hop by the time I reach mile post 67 on the Indiana Toll Road... and that continues all the way to mile 107. We are seeing the "AM-ization" of the FM band happen in a big way. I, for one, hate this... and can't wait until I have mobile Internet in the car. Then it'll be good-bye forever to all of the noise and interference of OTA radio as far as I am concerned!
On another, possibly happier note: WLS has turned off their IBCO Hiss-O-Matic. I am wondering if this has improved reception for WGTO listeners to the west of Cassopolis?