radioman148 said:
flytrap said:
WIIN Jackson, MS recently signed back on after being off the air for nearly a year in order to keep their license from being deleted. It runs 5,000 watts daytime. A few nights ago they forgot to turn off the transmitter and it was on the air all night. Which they have done quite often over the years. I was wondering if anyone outside of central Mississippi may have heard the station from what location you picked it up. It is currently simulcasting country music with its sister station US96.3 WUSJ. 5000 watts would likely cause havoc with WBBM in Chicago. And totally obliterates it around Jackson, MS.
I wonder if WBBM knows? They wouldn't be happy.
I doubt WBBM knows, unless it affects the Chicago market, and all points beyond where there are
some listeners (like Rockford, Milwaukee, Madison or Peoria) However, some die-hard listener to Newsradio 780 in the interference zone created by the Jackson, MS station
might complain, and that's when WBBM
might become aware of it. The FCC does not make it easy to report an interference complaint directly from the public. Rather, listeners would need to complain, so then the station engineer would be notified, and in a larger organization, management would decide whether or not to report the interference to the FCC. If the interference is well outside their primary or secondary service area, the station may not even bother reporting it. Depends on the station. Now if the interference was to WLW and the overnight truckers show, that might be more crucial since there are likely to be many more listeners at DX distances to WLW than WBBM.
The larger question, is: Do the daytimer's tech people make certain that their station is really off the air for the night? It only takes a few seconds to turn their radio on and tune in. Plus, they aren't making any money on the daytimer being on at night when they can't charge for advertising time since the station is
supposed to be off the air. So that's a nice electric bill for how many hours they're on and not supposed to be. Better to review the automation system that controls the TX Sign-on/off and make sure it's right. Beats getting an FCC fine!
Unfortunately, I will never hear the Jackson station, unless WBBM is off the air (very rare with 2 backups and a generator set that I believe can power either of the two 50kW transmitters or the 10kW unit). I'm less than 25 miles as the crow flies to their TX, but starting at 100-150 miles out DXers could try to null them out (unless you're N/NNW/NNE of the WBBM "stick") I did hear Reno (KCRL?) a long, long time ago (in the 70's) when WBBM was off and on the air for testing overnight on Sunday night/Monday morning way back when...