That's the best answer yet!This has been discussed many times. If it was possible, it would have been done.
As one who was involved with the programming of another 600 watt station on the ESB, I can tell you that even 10 or 12 blocks away that signal had nearly no building penetration... I had to hold a radio up to the hotel room window to hear it!In a hypothetical situation, I suppose 94.7 could move to ESB if it were a conforming class A. That would be cutting off their nose to spite their face, though. You’d have many of the same reception issues 105.9 would have in midtown, plus less coverage in the Jersey suburbs. 600w ain’t gonna do the trick.
And a block or two from the 13th floor pleasure palace that once was WMCA's 415 Madison suite.As one who was involved with the programming of another 600 watt station on the ESB, I can tell you that even 10 or 12 blocks away that signal had nearly no building penetration... I had to hold a radio up to the hotel room window to hear it!
That was diagonally across the street from 485 Madison, the CBS building before they built Black Rock.
That makes sense. That 60 degree null would have cut through a big chunk of Queens on its way to whatever station it was protecting in -- where? Providence? New Haven? Martha's Vineyard?This has been discussed many times. If it was possible, it would have been done.
The one example I think of whenever this is brought up is WBGO, which moved it's tower from downtown Newark to 4 Times Square. In the process they cut their power by about half and built in a null at 60 degrees. Here are two threads from 2011 on the process and the results:
Practically speaking, the station lost some of west Essex County and beyond, and didn't seem to gain much in Queens, which was their main goal.
a wild guess.. WLIW 88.3 southamptonThat makes sense. That 60 degree null would have cut through a big chunk of Queens on its way to whatever station it was protecting in -- where? Providence? New Haven? Martha's Vineyard?
@fybush answered your question 11 years ago, which you seemed to infer. It's 94.3 WMJC Smithtown.What moves need to be made in order to move 94.7 WXBK to Empire? I’m following the move of 103.7 in Hattiesburg into New Orleans and it seemed like many stations had to shuffle around in order to make that move work.
I doubt it, Paul. The Hamptons are virtually due East of midtown (90° +/- a couple of degrees). You need more like ENE of Times Square, a 60° heading, which (eyeballing a map) is more like the north shore of the Long Island Sound in Connecticut, so Stamford, Bridgeport, New Haven, or less likely (due to distance) Providence RI, Fall River MA or New Bedford MA. Hartford's probably too far north of that line.a wild guess.. WLIW 88.3 southampton
Audacy's "94.7 The Block" DOES NOT have a translator on 98.3 in Palisades Park. Sound of Long Island owns W252CS and leases WXBK-HD3 to feed its "Radio Korea" programming.I feel its ridiculous. They have a 98.3 translator in Palisades Park, NJ, only 22 miles away from WKJY, same frequency. KJoy is a Long Island station and not relevant to NJ or NYC, but the same could be said about WWSK. and its on 94.3 and WXBK is on 94.7..
I feel its ridiculous. They have a 98.3 translator in Palisades Park, NJ, only 22 miles away from WKJY, same frequency. KJoy is a Long Island station and not relevant to NJ or NYC
Lance, I think you interpret "they" more literally than I do. I doubt Xale intended "they" to refer specifically to Audacy, regardless of who owns WXBK-HD3 or who's leasing it to originate Radio Korea for the translator. Not everyone poster is as precise in their language as you.Audacy's "94.7 The Block" DOES NOT have a translator on 98.3 in Palisades Park. Sound of Long Island owns W252CS and leases WXBK-HD3 to feed its "Radio Korea" programming.
Right. But under no circumstance is the translator rebroadcasting The Block, which is what I construed the poster to be complaining about.Lance, I think you interpret "they" more literally than I do. I doubt Xale intended "they" to refer specifically to Audacy, regardless of who owns WXBK-HD3 or who's leasing it to originate Radio Korea for the translator. Not everyone poster is as precise in their language as you.
Including me. Another example of Mark Roberts' Law: Anyone who criticizes another poster's spelling [or grammar] will invariably have a typo in their own post.[...] Not everyone poster is as precise in their language as you.
I wasn't talking about the Block but the logic of the spacing rules. 96.7 was allowed to move to New Rochelle and this was nearly 5 decades after 1964. Same thing with 103.9.Audacy's "94.7 The Block" DOES NOT have a translator on 98.3 in Palisades Park. Sound of Long Island owns W252CS and leases WXBK-HD3 to feed its "Radio Korea" programming.
Full powered stations and translators have different separation rules. Additionally many of the second adjacent signals in the New York area are only allowed because they were licensed before the FCC created their spacing rules in 1964 and are grandfathered in place.
Doesn't 94.3 WJLK, 94.3 in the Hudson Valley, 94.5 PST, 94.3 The Shark, and 94.7 WMAS all have to move in order to do that?
Only WWSK is short-spaced. Audacy already downgraded WMAS adding a directional null when they moved WXBK from South Orange to the WOR tower. The others are not factors.Doesn't 94.3 WJLK, 94.3 in the Hudson Valley, 94.5 PST, 94.3 The Shark, and 94.7 WMAS all have to move in order to do that?
So can WWSK go directional with a null to the west in order to allow WXBK to move to Empire?Only WWSK is short-spaced. Audacy already downgraded WMAS adding a directional null when they moved WXBK from South Orange to the WOR tower. The others are not factors.