They’ve been really malfunctioning lately. Their signal is being interrupted by unusually high levels of white noise and multipath (?) What’s up? Are they doing transmitter testing?
They’ve been really malfunctioning lately. Their signal is being interrupted by unusually high levels of white noise and multipath (?) What’s up? Are they doing transmitter testing?
WXLO now reportedly has three on-channel booster transmitters on the air in an attempt to improve their reception in metro Boston.
WXLO now reportedly has three on-channel booster transmitters on the air in an attempt to improve their reception in metro Boston. One on the Hancock Tower, one between Route 2 and Concord Ave. in Lexington (at the WWDJ and WAZN site), and one on Bear Hill in Waltham (off Route 117 and 95/128).
These can possibly hurt more than help the reception if you're in an area where you're receiving more than one of them, or if you're receiving any of them along with their main signal transmitting from Leominster, at approximately equal power where you are. That can cause multipath distortion because, though the programming is the same, more than one signal is being received by your radio coming from different locations and arriving at minutely different times.
WXRV "The River" also has on-channel boosters on the air from those three sites, and two others.
Seems they are intent on doing better in the Boston Metro. I just saw an electronic billboard off the highway, with a "Now Playing...(insert song/artist).."
I don't think their programming is competitive enough to take away any listeners from the established stations.
Maybe they believe a lot of their Worcester/Fitchburg listeners travel to Boston and this would ensure the signal stays with their commute?
They may not be as concerned about taking many listeners from Boston stations as they may be about just getting more advertisers in the Boston market, who (I'm guessing) may pay higher rates and be potentially more numerous than advertisers in the Worcester/Central MA/Metro-West market. These decisions are usually all about the (potential) billing.
How can they document Boston listenership without corroborative ratings? Wouldn't any increase in WXLO's Boston share come at the expense of other stations?
This is another variation of attempts to defy the laws of physics with translators, and would be particularly bad in a moving car. With one on-channel booster, the odds of being in a location where both the main and translator signal are at approximately the same level is small. With 5 or 6, that changes greatly.
This is another variation of attempts to defy the laws of physics with translators, and would be particularly bad in a moving car. With one on-channel booster, the odds of being in a location where both the main and translator signal are at approximately the same level is small. With 5 or 6, that changes greatly.
There are new technologies that synchronize boosters with the main signal (the WXLO operations are not translators but boosters) so that "flutter" zones are significantly reduced if not eliminated. We are going to see a lot more of this, I believe.
There is still the problem of phase cancellation - which won't go away no matter how much wishful thinking is involved - particularly if they are going to deliberately overlay multiple signals as in the Radio-Locator map.