Structure Height | 487.7 m (1600 ft.) | |
| Overall Height Above Ground | 487.7 m (1600 ft.) | |
| Overall Height AMSL | 755.9 m (2479 ft.) | |
| Structure Type | Guyed Tower | |
| Owner | Radio Training Network, Inc. | |
| ©2023 Cavell Mertz & Associates, Inc. |
Structure Height | 487.7 m (1600 ft.) | |
| Overall Height Above Ground | 487.7 m (1600 ft.) | |
| Overall Height AMSL | 755.9 m (2479 ft.) | |
| Structure Type | Guyed Tower | |
| Owner | Radio Training Network, Inc. | |
| ©2023 Cavell Mertz & Associates, Inc. |
So, RTN is the owner and will be on the hook for the rebuild. A couple of questions
Structure Height487.7 m (1600 ft.) Overall Height Above Ground 487.7 m (1600 ft.) Overall Height AMSL 755.9 m (2479 ft.) Structure Type Guyed Tower Owner Radio Training Network, Inc. ©2023 Cavell Mertz & Associates, Inc.
There are a lot of variables, starting with the required wind load capacity in the area where the tower is built. A 1,600 foot tower in Columbus OH will require less wind load capacity than one in Miami, FL. And the earth where the anchors and base will go varies from very deep soil to clay to different kinds of rock, requiring different kinds of anchors. Depending on where the tower is made will affect shipping, and local weather will affect construction costs (if it rains or storms a lot, it takes more time and costs go up, for example).2. What does a new 1600' tower install cost?
A friend who was called in to work on rebuilding a station that lost its FM tower in a 60's era hurricane that hit the Gulf of Mexico told me about the results of the insurance investigation: the tower had been hit above the 100 foot level by a cow!No matter how good your tower is, a giant Hoover vacuum cleaner with 150-200mph winds and debris the size of train cars will twist it and shear it to pieces.
Last broadcast on that station before it went off: “I gotta go. We got cows”A friend who was called in to work on rebuilding a station that lost its FM tower in a 60's era hurricane that hit the Gulf of Mexico told me about the results of the insurance investigation: the tower had been hit above the 100 foot level by a cow!
The average cow is around 1,500 lbs and would be like having a flying car hit the tower.
You're correct...forgot all about 92.9. That tower, along with the iheart tower adjacent are the only tall towers in the area.WVFJ is not only short spaced to WALR at the WALR Aux site, it’s also short spaced to WZGC so no way the station can operate there except temporarily. The licensed site where the tower went down is the closest point to Atlanta the station can operate as a Class C1. RTN is a professional financially stable organization operated by reputable people. I’m sure the tower was well insured and it should be noted the wealthy Watkins family of Atlanta are key financial supporters and officers of RTN so they’ll make certain their Atlanta area signal is returned.
But a translator at 1200 feet HAAT!Draft Copy « Licensing and Management System « FCC
Licensing and Management Systementerpriseefiling.fcc.gov
Looking at the attachments, it looks like there are a few short spacing issues at the STA site. At 400 watts, I guess with good receiving antennas or other delivery, they can feed the translators.
That's the problem with the IF spacing requirements and second and third adjacent requirements. Going from Class A to C0 to Class C0 to C only gets you about 12 miles for second and third adjacent. Many radios still have problems with 53 and 54 channel spacing, but not that many with second adjacent and even less third adjacent.
Looks like it's little more than a translator at 400 watts.
Good to see your likes, HGR1290! Haven't heard from you in a while.
WVFJ does not serve a "radio market". Listener supported stations serve "coverage area population". The licensed signal covers 1.9 million potential contributors.Does a radio signal that does not fully cover the desired demos in a market worth building a 1600 foot stick for?
How many people in the demo utilizing a downgraded site versus licensed site?WVFJ does not serve a "radio market". Listener supported stations serve "coverage area population". The licensed signal covers 1.9 million potential contributors.
Of course it is worth building as tall a stick as possible as long as the height adds prospective listeners. The "desired demos" are people who might send money. Nielsen does not measure that, and artificial and contrived "market boundaries" are of zero importance.
Again I will mention that religious stations and many non-commercial ones of other kinds as well don't deal in markets. Markets are for, naturally, "marketers", who are selling stuff. Religious stations are simply looking for people, not markets.It would be interesting to see the coverage circles and pop counts from less tall towers closer to the market.
Its listener-supported status notwithstanding, WVFJ does sell advertising in the form of 30-second spots, with copy restrictions based on the FCC's underwriting rules. Of course, the station does not get business from agencies, which buy defined markets. But as it does with donations, a larger coverage area provides sales with greater potential.It does boil down to cost for donated dollars. I suspect a tall tower, in 2023, may not be a best use of money.
Its listener-supported status notwithstanding, WVFJ does sell advertising in the form of 30-second spots, with copy restrictions based on the FCC's underwriting rules. Of course, the station does not get business from agencies, which buy defined markets. But as it does with donations, a larger coverage area provides sales with greater potential.
I have an RTN sales booklet that states, "As a non-profit radio ministry, our funds are provided through gifts from individual listeners and businesses." I doubt businesses that advertise on WVFJ consider their spending as a gift.