Juan Bodley said:Scott I can say this: 106.3 DOES cover Columbia City decently. By Wikipedia's info (if you believe it) the transmitter for 106.3) is up by Huntertown off Hathaway Road. At this location and 5600 watts ERP they hit CC just fine, if anybody here listens. (I think the "wild bunch" are listening to Wild 96.3 or Hot 107.9.)
I stick to the little bug on the wall 91.5 FM for my local station...I just hope that if the 101.1 group does local coverage they DON'T go after Columbia City sports...then again I think they'd have to get permission from the Whitley County Consolidated School board to cover CC sports and I'm going to bet they will say NAY.
"Just fine," of course, is a little less specific than what the FCC wants to see... ;D
I went back to the 2003 application for 106.3 (then WSHI) to move from the county line site up to the new tower in Huntertown that's shared with WBTU, and it looks like they had to do some fancy footwork with the FCC just to demonstrate that the 70 dBu city-grade contour for 106.3 would barely clear the west side of Columbia City. Page 8 is the important one here:
https://licensing.fcc.gov/cdbs/CDBS...?appn=100682754&qnum=5260©num=1&exhcnum=1
There's no way at all that they can demonstrate the needed 70 dBu coverage of South Whitley with the current 106.3 signal, and they're certainly not moving it back from Huntertown.
(I even looked to see if WBTU could work as a "South Whitley" license, and it falls a bit short, too - but then, it can't move from "Kendallville" either, because WAWK isn't a full-time license there and thus wouldn't count as "first local service" if it's the last signal left there. The WAWK translator doesn't count, either; it's "secondary service.")
Bottom line: unless someone's got something even more creative up their sleeve, 101.1 is good and stuck where it is.