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End date for KUHA

KSBJ announces KUHA to become KXNG. Down 2 weeks for installation of new equipment for retransmission and a brand spanking new 50kW transmitter.

I was closer than you, Frog. Lol
 
KSBJ announces KUHA to become KXNG. Down 2 weeks for installation of new equipment for retransmission and a brand spanking new 50kW transmitter.

I was closer than you, Frog. Lol


Good job, thanks for keeping up with the original subject.
 
I think Houston was without classical for several years after KLEF flipped.

Not so. On March 10, 1986 the old KLEF 94.5 announced it was changing formats. The actual format flip took place at 6:05am on March 13, 1986, and the station became soft AC KJYY "Joy 95." The entire KLEF music library was donated to KUHF, which was then running Jazz outside of its morning/evening news blocks. The following Monday, KUHF started running Classical 9am to 4pm, while keeping Jazz for evenings and overnights. The Classical programming resulted in a big increase in donations to the station, and by the end of the year the remaining Jazz programming was replaced with Classical, while retaining the morning and evening news blocks. This program structure continued for the next 25 years, until the launch of KUHA and the separation into News and Classical stations.

Meanwhile, the old KYND 92.1, which had been running an Easy Listening format, flipped to fulltime Classical in early April 1986, using prepackaged recordings with canned intros and outros. Initially they called themselves "K-Y-N-D, your KLEF music station" as they awaited a call change. Several weeks later 92.1 acquired the KLEF call. When Michael Stude bought the station in the fall of 1987 the call was changed to KRTS. The station went through several signal upgrades over the years (the change from a Class A to a Class C2 in the early 90's resulted in Stude donating the 50kw 91.7 transmitter facility to Rice University and KTRU in order to keep within signal separation rules. KRTS eventually was upgraded to a C1.) The Classical format continued on KRTS until 2004, when the station was sold to Radio One.

The original KLEF 94.5 went on the air in 1964, but there had been some previous Classical outlets on the Houston FM band. I believe KRBE was Classical in its early years, but not sure when it changed (There is info online but I don't have time to look it up.) Perhaps there are some oldtimers that can fill in the pre-KLEF Classical situation.
 
Extremely small and fiercely loyal listeners is what keeps WRR going.

Changing demographics in Dallas proper will eventually force a change, though Classical will probably wind up elsewhere on the DFW radio waves. WRR does have a small but noisy following. Note the failure of the three way frequency swap of some years back that would have involved 93.3 and 105.7 in the market.
 
KSBJ announces KUHA to become KXNG. Down 2 weeks for installation of new equipment for retransmission and a brand spanking new 50kW transmitter.

Guess the existing transmitter really was the original from 1990. In that case, a new unit was way overdue. And they already have the new antenna that was installed last year. Interested to hear how the station will sound.

was closer than you, Frog. Lol

Yeah, I guess KSBJ wasn't as attached to the K*BJ pattern as I thought. Of course the only time we'll hear KXNG is at the TOH ID.
 
Guess the existing transmitter really was the original from 1990. In that case, a new unit was way overdue. And they already have the new antenna that was installed last year. Interested to hear how the station will sound.



Yeah, I guess KSBJ wasn't as attached to the K*BJ pattern as I thought. Of course the only time we'll hear KXNG is at the TOH ID.

Me too. Supposedly, it hasn't fulfilled its 50kW obligations in several years. Will be equally interested to see how the ministry utilizes the 99-5 and 91-3 translators in assisting the new KXNG in the southern areas of the MSA. Almost assuredly, 91-3 is relocating if KSBJ actually keeps it. I haven't seen anything that addresses it, though. I really do think at least one of the two will end up being divested.
 
Changing demographics in Dallas proper will eventually force a change, though Classical will probably wind up elsewhere on the DFW radio waves. WRR does have a small but noisy following. Note the failure of the three way frequency swap of some years back that would have involved 93.3 and 105.7 in the market.

The Friends of WRR will fight like hell to see that the City keeps 101.1.
 
Hey Purple

Is it a 50 KW transmitter, or is it 50 KW ERP with a lower powered Transmitter about 10 KW output and a 4-6 bay antenna, as I understand it 20 Kw is max FM transmitter power allowed, and 100 KW for TV and the big ERP numbers You see are made up with antenna gain, now AM is a different animal a 50 KW AM will have a 50 KW transmitter and another 25 KW used in the hi level modulator, new solid state AM transmitters are very efficient and consume less power.
 
:cool:Frog

KLEFs transmitter was on the top floor of the Tenneco building in Down Town Houston, in the summer of 1965, the antenna was on about a 150 ft tower on top of the cooling towers making the top of the tower about 600 ft high, the tower was shared with KXYX and KODA, I worked for KXYZ as a transmitter operator during the 90 day period a operator was required before they could go remote control, most FMs used horizontal polarization, In the early 70s the Shell building with its big stick dual polarization multiple user FM transmit antenna was built and was home to most of the big FMs in Houston until the 2000 ft ? channel 26 ? tower on Senior rd was built with a multiple user dual polarization FM antenna , which was destroyed when the first tower fell while the FM antenna was being installed and both were replaced, also in the early years KTRH ? had a back up AM Broadcast transmitter and antenna on top of the GULF Building before the big orange Gulf sign was installed but they had many sky wave complaints especially at night So they didn't use it much.
 
as I understand it 20 Kw is max FM transmitter power allowed, and 100 KW for TV and the big ERP numbers You see are made up with antenna gain,

I believe that is not correct. I have seen plenty of 40 kw installations, solo or combined 20 kw units. And both Nautel and Gates Air make up to 80 kw that appear to be FCC type accepted.

100 kw horizontal and vertical would require a 10 to 12 bay antenna, which is more bays than most stations would like to use.

Take a look at one of the ERI rototiller antenna specs, which shows the gain in different configurations including full wave and half wave bay spacing.
 
I confirm what David says. FM transmitters go to 40kW TPO from most of the competitors today and some manufacturers offer 80kW TPO units.
 
I confirm what David says. FM transmitters go to 40kW TPO from most of the competitors today and some manufacturers offer 80kW TPO units.

Of course, those 80 kw boxes only deliver about 57 kw analog if the highest level of HD is employed.
 
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