It's a pretty bad signal at night, missing about half of the market with its extreme directionality.You seem to be thinking that 590 would go dark! That would be very sad indeed.
It's a pretty bad signal at night, missing about half of the market with its extreme directionality.You seem to be thinking that 590 would go dark! That would be very sad indeed.
It's a pretty bad signal at night, missing about half of the market with its extreme directionality.
I don't necessarily mean go dark.You seem to be thinking that 590 would go dark! That would be very sad indeed.
Was 99.7 off too?The station is off the air. Tuned in a minute ago, all I could get was static.
Wonder if anyone at the station even noticed it went dark?
As of 9 PM, 590 is still off the air. Austin Energy's power outage map shows one customer in the vicinity of the KLBJ transmitter site without power and shows an estimated restoration time of 10:09 PM. It's not totally clear though that they are the customer without power.
No mentions of the power outage on the socials or on the website. I guess everyone listens on the translator or the stream.
... which has resulted in the #1 billing radio station in the market.They've often gone off the air. Like for no reason. But, it fits with their mostly unimpressive one-sided programming.
Although Lyndon Johnson (and his wife) once owned 590 (and 93.7) the flip to the KLBJ call came after his death, as a result of the sale of his TV station. Oddly, the TV station kept the legacy KTBC call while the retained radio stations changed theirs…opposite of what usually happened in such a situation.(I've always been amused by the fact that the call letters of a severely Republican leaning station has call letters that honor a classic democrat of the 40's to the 60's.
Thanks for jumping in with this and good to know that the engineers are getting the notifications! Can you give us any update on the 590 transmitter move? Living in S.A., I'm worried that I'm about to lose one of my favorite news talk stations on the car radio.Been enjoying the speculation and commentary on this thread - but as an insider at Waterloo Media let me add my 2-cents.
The appropriate people know anytime one of our stations either goes off, or we have dead air. There are systems in place for all of our brands. But our engineers don't live in our studios or at the xmtr sites. Not to mention, broadcasting and Murphy's Law go hand-in-hand. When things go wrong, they can sometimes really go wrong. Last year, our studios took a direct lightning strike causing catastrophic damage to 6 of our studios and countless other pieces of equipment. Our team had every one of our stations back on-air within 2 hours.
But to be fair, in the world of consolidation - we may well be an exception to the rule.
And just to reiterate... Waterloo Media is our Austin dba for Sinclair Telecable out of Norfolk, VA. Austin and Norfolk are our only stations. Sinclair Broadcast Group is the TV corporation known to lean just a bit right of center. We are not affiliated in any way.