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Live radio or VT after 7pm thoughts

... and it's easier on the transmitter if it stays on 24/7. Most failures occur at transmitter power-up.

Yup.. i ran an AM Daytimer in 2006/7/8 that required manual off/on, and the transmitter was old... i had problems more then once at sign on.

By signing off an FM at 730.. you might save a couple hundred bucks a month in electricity, if that.. and in the grand scheme of a stations budget, thats nothing.... and if that little makes a difference, youre in more trouble then you realize
 
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Decades ago, when stations were required to turn the carrier off and on a couple of times for Civil Defense (EBS) tests, I had a 50kW AM transmitter that suffered a major high voltage power supply failure which was caused the the carrier off-on-off-on. I modified the transmitter so we could kill the RF drive to the power amplifiers and save the power supply from the surges.
 
... and it's easier on the transmitter if it stays on 24/7. Most failures occur at transmitter power-up.
I can remember a few of these mornings. You've got a town waiting for the news and farm report, you hit the plates, the relay goes "thunk" and nothing happens
 
As for signing off at 7:30, unless you get a waiver from the FCC you must be on the air a minimum of 2/3rds of the hours 6am to 6pm na 2/3rds the hours from 6pm to Midnight except Sundays.

I think the intent of that rule is to have the frequency available for EAS use. If some emergency happens, EAS will trigger automatically and pre-empt programming. So even federal emergency services are automated. You don't need a live body to handle it.
 
As long as the person doing that shift is also selling spots.
When Jim Morgan, once the #1 morning host on Myrtle Beach, got fired for the second time as his second station met the same fate as the first--going from easy listening to AC--he said on his Facebook page that he had been hired by the oldies station, a very specialized station playing a particular style of music very popular on the S.C. coast, he was told he had to sell his own advertising, but he got the morning shift and as far as I know is still there.
 
Not a good way to sell a station where the jock has to sell their shift. Clients buy stations, nor shifts, and having several people involved with placing advertising on a station is a deal breaker. Not to mention the poor 6 to Midnight jock that can't sell hardly a commercial.
 
Not a good way to sell a station where the jock has to sell their shift. Clients buy stations, nor shifts, and having several people involved with placing advertising on a station is a deal breaker. Not to mention the poor 6 to Midnight jock that can't sell hardly a commercial.
I think in this case he was just proving his advertisers would support him. I can't find the Facebook post now. I managed to find the one where he said he was fired because I saved it.
 
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