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  1. A border blaster is a broadcast station that, though not licensed as an external service, is, in practice, used to target another country. The term "border blaster" is of North American origin, and usually associated with Mexican AM stations whose broadcast areas cover large parts of the United States, and United States border AM stations ...

  2. Dec 12, 2016 · In an instant, you can click to any dot on the map and hear what’s playing on the radio there, from Miami to Lahore to Berlin to Sulaymaniyah and beyond.

  3. Commercial radio in Mexico is largely owned at the regional or national level. Five large radio groups dominate the Mexican radio landscape: Grupo Radio Centro, Grupo ACIR, MVS Radio, Radio Fórmula, Radiorama and Televisa Radio, with a variety of local and regional broadcasters as well.

  4. That means for every MW channel in North America you can see a map showing the radiation pattern of every station. You can view the whole continent or zoom in to great detail. In fact you can zoom in and actually see the antenna masts!

  5. Dec 13, 2016 · There are plenty of available radio apps that let you search stations by country, but the Radio Garden interactive map for mobile and desktop makes it a whole lot more fun.

  6. However, the United States didn’t want to share the radio spectrum with Mexico, which lagged behind the United States in radio technology. Mexico solved this problem by ignoring its bossy neighbor to the north and broadcasting on any frequency it wanted.

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  8. You can select a city on the map or from the list to review the full frequency band in selected location. First there are listed FM stations in the range 87.5—108.0 MHz (65.9—74.00 in Russia and CIS, 76.0-89.9 MHz in Japan) and after that Longwave and Mediumwave stations that can be received in normal daily conditions.

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