WPRB just added an HD4, its silent now but I heard BIN was looking for a NJ FM signal, thought it would be WKXW but this new 4 sub makes me wonder...WKXW and WPST are too damn cheap to invest in anything HD. Kudos to 103.3.
It’s more like WPRB has a potential lessee of their HD4. They only upgraded to HD initially because an Indian broadcaster wanted to use WPRB-HD2 to feed a translator in Edison. I actually visited WPRB soon after it went HD. They told me they were glad that they installed an HD transmitter because now they can “fight back against Clear Channel”.
The two questions I have over the years are why is WKXW running an HD2 for a few years silent, and why is WPST the only big signal still without HD....
WPRB was not in HD until late 2011. And they used to sign off at night. Their HD upgrade was paid for by the Indians who had the HD2 for the eventual feeding of the 100.7 translator in Edison.
Initially, that translator was fed by Hot 97’s HD2 over the air. It would drop out whenever tropo brought in the 96.9 and 97.3 from Atlantic City to knock out the HD sidebands. Sometimes I even heard Hot 97 on the translator; imagine the shock when Indians would hear rap music on 100.7.
And I do remember a student at WPRB telling me that he was glad that they went HD because it helps them “fight Clear Channel”
WPRB just added an HD4, its silent now but I heard BIN was looking for a NJ FM signal, thought it would be WKXW but this new 4 sub makes me wonder...WKXW and WPST are too damn cheap to invest in anything HD. Kudos to 103.3.
Checked with B.Y., apparently as recent as 1990 they were broadcasting a few blocks off Route 1, near West Windsor and Duck Pond Park, 10m N of Trenton and 5m S of Princeton with 17,000 watts at 195 feet. There is no evidence of any tower at that spot now, I know WKXW moved on the TV tower long before this.
Actually, the WPRB facilities went from 17kW @ 195 feet to 14kW @ 728 ft in either 1991 or 1992 significantly broadening their coverage area. They went from being a fringe signal to a local in the Philadelphia area, and sound good to just north of Wilmington DE.