So why were they back on the air for a while? Did they modify their signal, and now they still have problems?InsideRadio had this coverage back in 2017. GA Translator To Remain Off-Air Until Interference Ends.
If I read the article correctly, they tried a directional antenna and low power. The line of site from Sweat Mountain might be better than most folks think. On a clear clear day near the top you can really see a lot of the metro north of Downtown without binoculars. Pretty good average household incomes in that area. If you can not be on one of the big downtown towers or the Fish / K-love tower, Sweat Mountain is viable. It would be even better if you could put a 500 foot tower on top but I am sure the FAA or NIMBY's would make it hard.So why were they back on the air for a while? Did they modify their signal, and now they still have problems?
Did you contact them and ask?
River has a music-intensive morning show. How do they do in that daypart? There may be room for another music morning show, especially away from the AOR/classic rock side. They could get someone to VT the news (maybe from a TV station) and have the live voice introduce it. Weather needs a live voice unless you want to run the same forecast all day like WGST did, which was silly.I think WSTR HD-2 could get some ratings on a full (i.e. not translator) but lesser FM signal, which is a rare thing in this market. I suppose 100.5 and 105.3 kind of describe what I mean.
There's such a hole in the market for the format, and I like the imaging. They probably would need a live voice for mornings, who would read news and weather during a music-intensive morning show.
Could class D AM stations on a clear channel receive extra incentive to shut down? AM class A clears are about the only AM stations still viable, unless you have a really good class B AM with a strong and not terribly directional night signal. Class C/D AMs now pretty much exist only to feed an FM translator. Maybe get rid of the "local" AM channels and the class Cs, and turn them into clear (class A) or regional (class B) channels.#4 Allow remaining AM translators that haven’t been effected by step #2 or #3 to turn in their AM licenses for a fee increase that is equal for what they are paying the FCC now and give them at least “existing” 60 DB protection for their existing 60 DB service making them A1 because they are accepting some interference in part of their coverage area and they count in market cap counts.