No idea at all. My question would be whether the station charges at all, or does it as part of its interpretation of community service. In fact, it might be found in some cases that the station operator is a member of that particular church and does it as a contribution.David E how much on average do radio stations charge Churches to air their programming on a non profit. Any guess would be a good one for me
Some good points David thanksNo idea at all. My question would be whether the station charges at all, or does it as part of its interpretation of community service. In fact, it might be found in some cases that the station operator is a member of that particular church and does it as a contribution.
David E how much on average do radio stations charge Churches to air their programming on a non profit. Any guess would be a good one for me
No idea at all. My question would be whether the station charges at all, or does it as part of its interpretation of community service. In fact, it might be found in some cases that the station operator is a member of that particular church and does it as a contribution.
The population of Lancaster / Palmdale is 517,000.Seeing that KFXM is an LPFM in the desert, their rate is probably quite a bit lower than that.
What was "Ride In The Country"? What other religious programming did they have?Well it appears KFXM has gotten rid of their religious programming as well as a ride in the country program on Sunday morning. I really enjoyed ride in the country. Time to search for a classic country again.
They had on religion pastors that's all I know. Also a ride in the country was a 2 hour segment of classic country from 10 till 12 noon playing don Williams t. G. Sheppard, and other country stars.What was "Ride In The Country"? What other religious programming did they have?
KFXM occasionally has long outages. The one a couple months lasted about 11 days, but it was back after that.It was a good run for them. Times change and so did the market.
This is a LPFM. Nothing in that kind of station is particularly expensive. Studio gear is computer based, and computers are cheap. Hard drives are even cheaper... a 20tb drive is now down to under $500. The transmitters used are generally modular, with replaceable parts. About the most costly part is the antenna, tower or tower mount / lease and coax. Still, at low power it is relatively cheap.It gets expensive trying to fix outages. I wonder why they have so many?
Thanks for the clarification DavidThis is a LPFM. Nothing in that kind of station is particularly expensive. Studio gear is computer based, and computers are cheap. Hard drives are even cheaper... a 20tb drive is now down to under $500. The transmitters used are generally modular, with replaceable parts. About the most costly part is the antenna, tower or tower mount / lease and coax. Still, at low power it is relatively cheap.
I'd love to hear from Michi about the estimated cost of building a "nice" but practical LPFM with leased tower vs. owned tower alternatives.
Often LPFM outages are not repair issues... they are health and economics issues with the operator or committee that runs the station. There are thinks like city licenses, power bills, insurance, FCC filing fees, etc., that can pile up in an all-volunteer station that may not get donations during a recession or in the current sky-high inflation period.
It's up, but only playing Anne Murray, Bee Gees, and Paul Anka songs. Will be glad when KFXM is restored back to the station we know and love.I just now checked the stream, and the station is back up and running.