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Saving AM Radio

The FCC moved AM stations around via NARBA in 1941. Something similar ought to be considered again, allowing licensed stations to have sufficient power to cover their MSA, at least during daytime hours. If frequencies need to change, or two marginal players are ordered to combine operations, the FCC ought to have that ability to decree it.
NARBA made minor adjustments in frequency of stations on the higher 3/4 of the dial. It did not move allocations or classes, it just shuffled the cards a bit.

To raise power would require eliminating night skywave protection, reducing daytime protection, and shutting down about 2/3 of all AMs to be able to do that.

It would also require nearly all stations to build improved or changed transmitter sites, something very few AMs will do.

The only partial solution is to make the AM translators permanent and let those linked AMs turn in the AM license. The rest of the AM will linger on until there is no more revenue.

AM can not be saved.
 
Remove the 50 kW limit. Mandate digital. Or at least hybrid.
No station needs more than 50 kw to cover their market, and out of market signal are not revenue-producing.

Nobody is buying radios today. They will not buy "digital" radios. And it will take a decade or more for just half of all car radios to have digital.
 
The current FCC thinks everything is just fine with AM radio. No need to save it.
That shows you that the FCC leadership is more concerned with mobile phones and the like.

All one has to do is look at "the rest of the world" (including our northern and southern neighbors) to see that AM is dead or dying everywhere else.
 
There is no upside for the FCC to do this.
The upside is giving AMs that want to stay on the air the chance to improve facilities if a huge percentage of AMs move to their translator only
This is really only an issue for EV manufacturers. Which political party is opposed to EVs?
All of us with longer commutes are opposed. I do a weekly drive into the LA area, and at present could not make the round trip and my destination has no chargers and likely will no for man, many years.

I even looked at off-site chargers, and the back-up or "out of service" ratio means my combined 5 hour commute would take an extra additional hour at least and make it a 16 hour day sometimes. No thanks.

Opposition to EVs at their present cost is not just a single party issue. For many, it involves living in areas where long drives are required, living in apartment buildings with no present or near (5-year) plans for charging, working where there are no employee chargers, living in very hot or very cold climates, etc., etc.
 
Money! The FCC gets usage fees from all AM stations. The FCC will not destroy their budget by asking their superior, Congress, to zap the AM dial.
As Kelly said, the AM license fees are "a rounding error" in the FCC budget. All AMs could disappear and the savings on staffing requirements would likely cover the lost revenue.
 
Different situation. The VHF band was full in most markets, with TV the visual media game in town. UHF was added to allow for new stations. Eventually, UHF became the transition band for DTV. AM isn't growing, nor will it ever considering all the competition from much more quality options.
A lot has changed in 70 years.
And were an additional band be added for AMs to move to, nobody is going to buy radios to listen. Brazil is trying this, and it is not working well at all (they added what is essentially the former low band TV channels to the FM dial).
 
Opposition to EVs at their present cost is not just a single party issue. For many, it involves living in areas where long drives are required, living in apartment buildings with no present or near (5-year) plans for charging, working where there are no employee chargers, living in very hot or very cold climates, etc., etc.
I think you can add many city residents, especially those living in rowhouses or townhouses with no garage. It’s not realistic, at least now, to be able to charge your car on many city streets.
 
All one has to do is look at "the rest of the world" (including our northern and southern neighbors) to see that AM is dead or dying everywhere else.
As for western Europe: AM is gone from France. Mediumwave is gone altogether; the Allouis longwave station at 162 is still on the air with carrier only because it's the official time standard for France. (Maybe RMC at 216 is still on the air; I did hear it last year when I was over there.) I believe mediumwave is also gone from Germany and Belgium. The Netherlands cleared the FM AM dial and is allowing low-power AM operations (<100 watts). That hasn't been a rousing success. Denmark got rid of mediumwave years ago. Luxembourg had digital transmissions at 1440; I haven't been in the Low Countries this year so far (plans for a trip are in abeyance due to my bad foot). Mediumwave seems to be entrenched in Spain, but I wonder how many listeners those stations really have. I don't know about Italy or Portugal.

The American solution to problems tends to be to allow the marketplace to take its course, so it may be a while - and there will probably always be at least a few AM stations - but I would not stake my career or investments on AM's being around.

Edit: Fixed very obvious typo, which I retained with a strikeout.
 
As for western Europe: AM is gone from France. Mediumwave is gone altogether; the Allouis longwave station at 162 is still on the air with carrier only because it's the official time standard for France. (Maybe RMC at 216 is still on the air; I did hear it last year when I was over there.) I believe mediumwave is also gone from Germany and Belgium. The Netherlands cleared the FM AM dial and is allowing low-power AM operations (<100 watts). That hasn't been a rousing success. Denmark got rid of mediumwave years ago. Luxembourg had digital transmissions at 1440; I haven't been in the Low Countries this year so far (plans for a trip are in abeyance due to my bad foot). Mediumwave seems to be entrenched in Spain, but I wonder how many listeners those stations really have. I don't know about Italy or Portugal.

The American solution to problems tends to be to allow the marketplace to take its course, so it may be a while - and there will probably always be at least a few AM stations - but I would not stake my career or investments on AM's being around.

Edit: Fixed very obvious typo, which I retained with a strikeout.

Denmark has a few AM's, ive heard one of their SW counterparts

The low pwoer am's not being a rousing success is a bit of a misnomer.... theyre mroe hobby stations then commercial ad selling entitites
 
If you were on a task force assigned by the FCC to help save AM Radio, what recommendations would you make?
Sunset the band. There are like... maybe 6(?) stations worth saving. Most are FM simulcasting anyway:
  • WBBM 780 — now at 105.9
  • WINS 1010 — now at 92.3
  • WSB 750 — now at 95.5
  • KNX 1070 — now at 97.1
  • KYW 1060 — now at 103.9
  • KFI 640... who market the crap out of the iHeartRadio app (and could steal 98.7)
Nearly everything else is just pulling garbage off the satellite and inserting shady local "gold dealer" spots in between. AM is sentimental to aging Boomers who remember the Top 40 era of their long-gone teen years and the politics of Rush Limbaugh. But sentimentality does not make good policy! And FCC is in the business of setting policy.

AM is dead. Bury it and move on.
 
Sunset the band. There are like... maybe 6(?) stations worth saving. Most are FM simulcasting anyway:
  • WBBM 780 — now at 105.9
  • WINS 1010 — now at 92.3
  • WSB 750 — now at 95.5
  • KNX 1070 — now at 97.1
  • KYW 1060 — now at 103.9
  • KFI 640... who market the crap out of the iHeartRadio app (and could steal 98.7)
Nearly everything else is just pulling garbage off the satellite and inserting shady local "gold dealer" spots in between. AM is sentimental to aging Boomers who remember the Top 40 era of their long-gone teen years and the politics of Rush Limbaugh. But sentimentality does not make good policy! And FCC is in the business of setting policy.

AM is dead. Bury it and move on.
None of what you suggest is in the best interest of the public, nor the FCC. The MW/AM band is useless for anything other than broadcasting AM stations, so it's not like the UHF band where 6Mhz chunks of spectrum can be auctioned for revenue. May as well let time run it's course without government intervention.
 


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