Need the radio professionals on this board to help me with this one.
Why are AM/FM simulcasts only listed in the ratings as either AM or FM? And, how do we know the allocation of listeners to each band?
Examples here of all-news stations on the west coast: KNX AM-FM in Los Angeles, and KCBS-AM/KFRC-FM San Francisco. In L.A., only KNX *FM* is listed in the ratings. I realize 99% of the time only the FM is identified on-air. But there has to be *some* listening to the AM, it has a much better signal than the FM.
In San Francisco, it's the opposite. The 50kw AM is listed in the ratings, even though presumably more people are tuning into the FM. One difference is that they identify both call letters routinely.
Thanks in advance for answers.
Why are AM/FM simulcasts only listed in the ratings as either AM or FM? And, how do we know the allocation of listeners to each band?
Examples here of all-news stations on the west coast: KNX AM-FM in Los Angeles, and KCBS-AM/KFRC-FM San Francisco. In L.A., only KNX *FM* is listed in the ratings. I realize 99% of the time only the FM is identified on-air. But there has to be *some* listening to the AM, it has a much better signal than the FM.
In San Francisco, it's the opposite. The 50kw AM is listed in the ratings, even though presumably more people are tuning into the FM. One difference is that they identify both call letters routinely.
Thanks in advance for answers.


