I’m not seeing Seattle in the ‘48 yearbook, either.What do you see listed for Portland in 1947-8? It didn't get TV until 1952.
I’m not seeing Seattle in the ‘48 yearbook, either.What do you see listed for Portland in 1947-8? It didn't get TV until 1952.
The Oregonian's KGWG. It shows in every Yearbook starting in 1948. It shows in 1949, too. But then disappears and later shows as what we'd obviously consider to be a CP. The question is whether it actually ran in the three post-war years and then closed, or whether it appeared as licensed but was actually never built.What do you see listed for Portland in 1947-8? It didn't get TV until 1952.
In the analog era, 470 to 512 MHz was shared between UHF TV channels 14 to 20 and public safety radio communications.I remember hearing police or fire calls down below Channel 14.
I did a little more reading last night. It appears the Oregonian secured the CP for KGWG channel. 6 in 1947 (hence the BY listings in 47 and 48), never built it (hence the lack of a start date), decided to focus only on the newspaper and radio and returned the CP.This is new to me. KPTV Channel 27 began in 1952. KOIN 6 in '53, KLOR 12 in '55, later merging with 27 and sending 27 dark and KGW 8 in '56. Portland was held back because of a freeze to study UHF. This is the first I've heard about anything before 1952.
My dad bought a brand new F-150 in 1992 that only had an AM radio.There was not and has never been any such mandate. GM and Ford were still selling stripped-down models with AM only well into the 80s.
From what I understand Fresno became an all UHF market in 1961, so this was probably the case. I should have finished the thread first would delete if I could.Another possibility, not out of the question, is that Tuna was seeing Fresno stations, which are all UHF. Modesto is 90 miles from Fresno, and Tuna says the town he was in was south of Modesto—-which would make Fresno closer than Sac or SF.
If the town Tuna stayed in was Turlock, the distance to Fresno is only 57 miles.
Page 66 of the 1949 Broadcasting Yearbook shows KRSC-TV/5 Seattle, which went on the air on 11/25/1948. It is now KING-TV.However, the 1949 book shows two in Portland—-channels 3 and 6. And none in Seattle.
That's the commercial. Can't believe you found it.This ad is not so much saying "Wow! AM radio!" as it is "It's a cheap car, but not so cheap that you have to pay extra for stuff that's standard on real cars."
It was @kevtronics who posted it. It just shows up in my reply for context.That's the commercial. Can't believe you found it.