...(1230, 1240, 1340, 1400, 1450, and 1490 kHz) with a Class A power (1kW day and night, nda single tower) decide to change to a regional frequency and drop its nighttime power output. The question occurred to me as I was pondering the station histories of KXSL (1470 kHz) in Show Low, AZ and KYWL (1480 kHz) licensed to Belgrade, MT (Bozeman market).
KXSL was the old KVSL at 1450kHz. Initially at .5W days/.250W nights, it, like the vast majority of the other stations was allowed to (and did) go 1kW full time when the FCC allowed that, if memory serves, back in the mid-1980s. During the second decade of this century, the station moved to 1470 kHz with a daytime power increase to 5kW but with a nighttime drop to 87W. The question in my mind is why would this move occur. I suppose that one answer may be to be able to draw in some of the outlying audience that crosstown competitor KVWM gets but if AM radio is dying, why even bother.
The case of KYWL is even more interesting. It didn't come on the air until the last decade at 1490 kHz with 1kW licensed full time to Bozeman. It then moved to Belgrade, changed its frequency to 1480, keeping the 1kW days but dropping the nighttime power to 157W non-directional. Again, the question I have to ask is why. Belgrade already had an FM outlet licensed to it (KCMM at 99.1 mHz) so there was no need for a new radio station there. The closest station on 1490 kHZ (licensed to Laurel, MT, a southwestern suburb of Billings) had already turned in its license to the FCC so there was no possible daytime interference, even on the best radios available. So again, why bother changing the frequency. I scratch my head in wonder.
KXSL was the old KVSL at 1450kHz. Initially at .5W days/.250W nights, it, like the vast majority of the other stations was allowed to (and did) go 1kW full time when the FCC allowed that, if memory serves, back in the mid-1980s. During the second decade of this century, the station moved to 1470 kHz with a daytime power increase to 5kW but with a nighttime drop to 87W. The question in my mind is why would this move occur. I suppose that one answer may be to be able to draw in some of the outlying audience that crosstown competitor KVWM gets but if AM radio is dying, why even bother.
The case of KYWL is even more interesting. It didn't come on the air until the last decade at 1490 kHz with 1kW licensed full time to Bozeman. It then moved to Belgrade, changed its frequency to 1480, keeping the 1kW days but dropping the nighttime power to 157W non-directional. Again, the question I have to ask is why. Belgrade already had an FM outlet licensed to it (KCMM at 99.1 mHz) so there was no need for a new radio station there. The closest station on 1490 kHZ (licensed to Laurel, MT, a southwestern suburb of Billings) had already turned in its license to the FCC so there was no possible daytime interference, even on the best radios available. So again, why bother changing the frequency. I scratch my head in wonder.
