A
AnyHuman
Guest
Dead air on both KCKC and online. I imagine technical problems or nobody there.
Outside of the fact that having a carrier on with no legal IDs is a violation...The transmitter should turn off when it detects dead air if you ask me, would save energy.
I think a lot of people look at their own electric bills -- for lights, appliances, electronics, etc. -- and think "Imagine how much WXXX is paying for 50 kilowatts of power 24/7!" Putting themselves in ownership's shoes, they can see themselves fretting over that huge bill and looking for ways to reduce it. It's hard to imagine such a big number basically being baked into the routinely accepted cost-to-profit ratio of a media company that owns radio stations, and that the power bill could go up by half and still not be cause for ownership to lose sleep over, much less to consider going dark and turning in the license, a course of action I've seen posters here suggest with, apparently, a completely straight face.Outside of the fact that having a carrier on with no legal IDs is a violation...
... what is the obsession by a number of posters with the "high cost" of station electric bills?
For most stations... and and particularly those in metro areas... electricity is a relatively minor expense item.
Let's look at a hypothetical case of a station in NYC or Chicago on one of the tall buildings. They have an ERP around 5 kw, and lets say they have no antenna "gain" so they have to output 10 kw of RF. The transmitter and gear may use 15 kw an hour, at maybe $ 0.20 per kWh. So that is $3 and hour, about $75 a day and under $2250 a month.I think a lot of people look at their own electric bills -- for lights, appliances, electronics, etc. -- and think "Imagine how much WXXX is paying for 50 kilowatts of power 24/7!" Putting themselves in ownership's shoes, they can see themselves fretting over that huge bill and looking for ways to reduce it. It's hard to imagine such a big number basically being baked into the routinely accepted cost-to-profit ratio of a media company that owns radio stations, and that the power bill could go up by half and still not be cause for ownership to lose sleep over, much less to consider going dark and turning in the license, a course of action I've seen posters here suggest with, apparently, a completely straight face.
Fixed on Friday Sep 9th by 06:30 or 07:00 AM. It was off for at least 12 hours or so. Probably nobody there and no alarm going off to notify anyone.
The transmitter should turn off when it detects dead air if you ask me, would save energy.
Heck they could have been transmitting audio for the deaf overnight.![]()
Off for maintenance, such as work on a section of coax or the antenna switch. Can't be done when on the air.What do you think was happening overnight then?