Cumulus has canceled the license for KVEN-AM Ventura.
Is there a news story that Entrevision is planning to flip 103.5 KHHM to Country? What about its simulcast sister station, 98.9 KCVR-FM in Columbia? Both currently play an English/Spanish language Rhythmic format.
Sacramento has one full power Country station, 105.1 KNCI, owned by Bonneville. And iHeart has a country FM translator, 107.1 The Bull, fed by 93.7 KYRV-HD2. Currently KNCI is #5, while K296GB 107.1 is #19, just under a one rating.
The ASRs are in the name of Abella Properties, LLC. I guess the land is worth more than the station.
I can't imagine giving away those call letters. It would be like giving away KLAC or KFI.RIP KVEN. When I lived in LA, I often drove through Ventura, Santa Barbara and SLO counties for work. KVEN was usually the first station I would seek out once I left LA county.
It might be, but the station could be operated with a simple top-loaded wire antenna, and a solid state 1kw Xmitter in a closet. Coverage wouldn't be as good as a 1/4 wave tower with ground radials, but it would be within limits and cover the metro.Many companies turn in the license to prevent another radio entity selling against them. Eliminating an entity from the advertising pie means the whole market is healthier.
I doubt many LPFMs could handle the cost of operation and associated costs involved in running an AM. The vast majority of LPFM stations are operating on budgets of under $5,000 a year.
It is possible the tower site land exceeds the financial potential of the station.
A "flat top" or "inverted L" are all going to be a small fraction of a wavelength, and likely will have a very steeply incline j on the two sidebands. 1400 only covered a part of the country daytime with a "real" antenna and at night it was lost within 10 to 12 miles of the site. With a wire antenna it is improbable that it would have a good ground or counterpoise.It might be, but the station could be operated with a simple top-loaded wire antenna, and a solid state 1kw Xmitter in a closet. Coverage wouldn't be as good as a 1/4 wave tower with ground radials, but it would be within limits and cover the metro.
I can't imagine giving away those call letters. It would be like giving away KLAC or KFI.
The only real reason I think they shut it down and cancelled the license, is that knowing Cumulus' reputation for slash and burn broadcast management, it's just another way of eliminating any kind of competition. Cumulus is known to buy a station, fire all of the air personalities, replace morning drive with cheaper air personalities, and either automate or pickup the rest of the day-parts off of a satellite or both. The fact that they turned the freq in to the FCC rather than sell it cheap or even give it to a non-profit or other community group that could use it as a community voice proves to me that know the station has value, and given the opportunity they'd shut down all stations in the market except their own if they could find a legal away to do so.
There are a bunch of LP FM's in VC with various formats. This shows a real need for other voices besides mainstream broadcasting. The LP FM's each serve only a few miles. Just think what somebody or a community group with a little imagination could do with a basic 1000 watt ND AM signal on 1450 whose daytime signal actually serves all of Ventura County along with Santa Barbara. I think the only reason a company like Cumulus would give this back to the gov't is simply because they don't want anyone else to have it.
I know of many, many AMs that have been built on the sides or top of mountains. In fact, when I owned stations in Ecuador, in Quito all 30 AMs were on mountainsides or on top of a mountain. Only in later years did some stations locate far from the city on flatter land.I think you mean a 10kw FM. You would not put an AM station on top of a tall mountain. The relatively long wave length (compared to FM) of an AM station requires a good ground plane for maximum coverage
Sorry, yes I did... fat fingersI think you mean a 10kw FM. You would not put an AM station on top of a tall mountain. The relatively long wave length (compared to FM) of an AM station requires a good ground plane for maximum coverage
KVTA in 25-54 gets less than a 0.5 share That is hardly an AM magnet.I think you're right David, but I believe the folks at 1590 KVTA might disagree with your last statement.
I'm glad it worked for you. 50 years ago 1500kHz in Burbank did that and it was a disaster. 10kw yielding 500 watt coverage by day and uncontrollable skywave at night. KSTP in the Twin Cities got the FCC to make them drop their night power to a kw.I know of many, many AMs that have been built on the sides or top of mountains. In fact, when I owned stations in Ecuador, in Quito all 30 AMs were on mountainsides or on top of a mountain. Only in later years did some stations locate far from the city on flatter land.
But up and down the Andes, there are and were stations on mountains.
My favorite was the Venevision Radio Caracas station, 100 kw on 950, which leveled the top of a small mountain peak and built their site on it. There were no better sites.