I was going to include a sticker from the current KAZY in this posting. But then I realized it's not even in the same market (although it's close). I guess the KAZY call letters were well known enough to be used again and/or the current owner has a good sense of radio history.
The old KAZY (later KBPI, now KWBL) signal is a monster. Covering from the Wyoming line to just south of Colorado Springs. So, it stands to reason that Cheyenne probably was in the 40dBu range (ie: the "if the wind blows right" range, I like to call it) for the old 106.7 KAZY.
What's pretty wild is the KAZY callsign stood unused from 1994 to 2008 (per FCCData).
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KAZY is still around, just a little north of Denver now.
KAZY and it's Active Rock format, branded as "93-7 KAZY" ("ka-zee") can be heard in Cheyenne (where the station is licensed).
I was going to include a sticker from the current KAZY in this posting. But then I realized it's not even in the same market (although it's close). I guess the KAZY call letters were well known enough to be used again and/or the current owner has a good sense of radio history.
The old KAZY (later KBPI, now KWBL) signal is a monster. Covering from the Wyoming line to just south of Colorado Springs. So, it stands to reason that Cheyenne probably was in the 40dBu range (ie: the "if the wind blows right" range, I like to call it) for the old 106.7 KAZY.
What's pretty wild is the KAZY callsign stood unused from 1994 to 2008 (per FCCData).
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