Ambiguous is good enough - pull the FCC data for minutiae, as desired.Interesting but not real helpful due to relatively ambiguous location descriptions. No matter (see previous post), those north Swan Road towers are not in current use. I am real surprised that the residents of the foothills haven't gone out there with grinders and chopped them down.
Ambiguous is good enough - pull the FCC data for minutiae, as desired.
Pima County Wireless Integrated Network is the major tenant there - city owns the dirt there - stories from 2013:
https://www.kold.com/story/22090011/familiar-radio-tower-taken-down/
https://www.kold.com/story/22093445/case-of-the-disappearing-radio-towersolved/
...and old Fybush article:
https://www.fybush.com/sites/2010/site-100903.html
I'm told by a reliable source that the station for sale is a 150 watt translator. Its signal would be slightly worse than K-DRY on 101.7. But in order to use this translator the buyer would either need to own an existing Tucson area station or lease one. One possibility might be to buy 1210 or 1330 and use it to feed audio to the translator.
One thing I've never understood is why a person wanting to sell a radio station wouldn't want all prospective buyers to know what station it is. Be that as it may, my informant says that his wife is heavily involved with the station that is for sale so he's in a good position to know. There is little doubt that it is a translator that transmits from the Tucson Mountains communications site.
The attempt to move the Willcox FM on 104.9 to Tucson has been in the works for at least ten years but it never has materialized. Very likely the problem is massive opposition from the company that owns the translator that relays the sports talk station on 1490 A.M. For years that station was owned by Scripps, a company that could afford high priced lawyers in Washington. The new full power FM would require that translator to go silent. I can't see any new attempt to move the Willcox station to Tucson though you should never say "never".
Years ago the owners of the Sierra Vista station on 100.9 tried to move into Tucson but that fizzled. Ted Tucker's company owns 101.7 in Sierra Vista and they do have permission to move to Tucson but curiously it has yet to happen though the construction permit was issued years ago.
Looks like Ted Tucker already has designs on 104.5 and in 2017 he got a CP to put his Vail station on 104.5. There is no question in my mind that the station to be sold for $650,000 is a translator with 150 watts. I was able to hear the translator clearly almost as far east as Benson so it has a useable signal in most parts of metro Tucson. I don't believe that KKYZ is presently for sale. It is currently top rated in Cochise County and one of the few Tucker stations that isn't losing money. I think that Ted has designs on keeping KKYZ in Sierra Vista and also somehow claiming a nearby frequency in suburban Tucson. Why the Tucson station isn't yet on the air is a mystery. Ted may be experiencing some financial problems.
Looks like Ted Tucker already has designs on 104.5 and in 2017 he got a CP to put his Vail station on 104.5. There is no question in my mind that the station to be sold for $650,000 is a translator with 150 watts. I was able to hear the translator clearly almost as far east as Benson so it has a useable signal in most parts of metro Tucson. I don't believe that KKYZ is presently for sale. It is currently top rated in Cochise County and one of the few Tucker stations that isn't losing money. I think that Ted has designs on keeping KKYZ in Sierra Vista and also somehow claiming a nearby frequency in suburban Tucson. Why the Tucson station isn't yet on the air is a mystery. Ted may be experiencing some financial problems.
The only Tucson-area Tucker frequency that has been on-air consistently lately is 98.1 Tubac. The other two, 98.5 and 103.7, have been 'dark' for months now.
I've heard 98.1 at early hours of the morning. My suspicion is there's no power problem where the transmitter is located for that station, as opposed to the 98.3 / 103.7 station location.
98.3 is owned by iHeart and plays hip-hop and rap and whatever young Mexicans and blacks are into. 98.3 and 103.7 are owned by companies controlled by Tucker and they are quite possibly the only FM daytimers in the nation. Both transmit from a site just east of Highway 83 that leads from the Interstate to Sonoita. Nearby ranches have commercial power but Tucker would rather not pay to install the power lines. Cheaper to run down at sundown. He has an uncanny ability to get the FCC to disregard its rules including minimum operating schedule. On Monday afternoon I noticed that both 98.5 and 103.7 were off the air. 98.5 is so close to 98.3 that it must be relocated to another frequency before it can be sold at a capital gain. But the needed changes are simply not happening. Meanwhile radio stations lose value almost with every passing day.
98.3 is owned by iHeart and plays hip-hop and rap and whatever young Mexicans and blacks are into.