About the only KC station I could regularly get here was 107.3 when its tower was in Odessa. KQRC 98.9 was a fairly frequent catch, too, and KPRS and KLOU seemed to split the time pretty evenly on 103.3. Then again, the dial filled out a lot between the time you lived in Mid-MO and the time I arrived. KQRC, of course, is now listenable only via streaming since KFRU signed on its translator.
Unless it's a weekday morning when tropo is coming in. I've heard that KQRC often clobbers the translator at times like those. I've never been lucky enough to hear that for myself when in town.
Translators can be easily clobbered; they're just not that powerful. Concerning the original topic, it feels like KCTO tried to use the 99.3 translator as a cheap STL. Perhaps there were difficulties in getting Internet access to the transmitter? I would find that hard to believe, though. It's not like KCTO is on some mountaintop somewhere that requires a 4WD vehicle to get to.
Not sure who owns the Tower Drive site, but I'm pretty sure KARO was there (or very near there) when it was on 101.7.
Yes, I should have made that clearer. KARO started out there, too. I saw the facility several times, including the filters that KFMZ was supposed to use to reduce interference from the co-location of the other station, but that Rice kept taking out. KFMZ actually splattered all over the place in those days, which is why I tend to doubt tales of Rice's engineering skill. KARO lent me some filters so that I could have some reception of St. Louis, at the cost of a bit of insertion loss.
Premier actually hired quite-a-lot of his {Rice's} former employees, and that seemed to really get under his skin. On the old Missouri Radio Message Board, he was always complimentary of Zimmer while never having a good word to say about Premier or anyone who worked there. I always took that to mean that we were doing something right!
What also isn't remembered is that, at least in the 1970s, KFMZ was more tolerated than liked, particularly by the student population. There just weren't many choices then. KTGR-FM was still in mono. KJMO was difficult to receive. KKCA from Fulton was amateurish. KTXY's predecessor was an easy-listening station. So was KWWR from Mexico. I could go on and on. KFMZ's automation was a joke, with the same two tunes always appearing next to each other.
I will say that KFMZ started improving in the 1980s and by the 1990s was a pretty respectable rock station before jumping on the alternative bandwagon where it also seemed to do well.
It was probably better 50+ years ago, but, even then, I can't imagine putting a broadcast tower up in downtown Columbia unless the plan was to park it on the Tiger Hotel. Rice, though, was, if nothing else, known for his engineering prowess and rarely, if ever, made a dumb mistake like that.
I suspect that was a placeholder. That intersection isn't much different today from what it was 50 years ago. No way a tower could ever have gone there.
These days, you'd also run into issues putting up towers in the city of Columbia because the land has been going for a premium. Not sure if it was the original KCMQ tower near Paris Rd and I-70, but it was there before it moved onto the KRCG tower in New Bloomfield.
Yes, that was the original KTGR-AM/FM tower. The FM was added late in 1967 as a nighttime extender for the AM ; otherwise, they simulcasted. KTGR-FM became KTGC in 1977, with the "C" standing for "country", finally starting to broadcast in stereo as well. Then the AM and FM swapped formats in 1978, with the FM becoming KCMQ. It was a pretty good little combo for several years after that.
I want to say around a dozen years ago, it was taken down and replaced with a standard cell tower. KTGR remained there for several years after KCMQ left, but it's on the KFRU tower behind Rumors now. Can't remember when it moved, but it seems like Zimmer filed to move it when I was working there a little over 20 years ago.
That sounds about right. It still amazes me that KCMQ is almost a full C1.