EDIT: CONFIRMED! KARR has flipped formats, and did flip on the upgraded translator station. Nice! (Wish I could edit the headline)
Wait, STOP THE PRESSES!
EDIT: CONFIRMED! KARR has flipped formats, and did flip on the upgraded translator station. Nice! (Wish I could edit the headline)
One can learn a lot by simply utilizing the FCC website. On the other hand, conjecture and speculation can be so much more amusing.
("Special Temporary Authority" for the Ron Bailee dropouts)
I see that "Sunnylands" has filed to move the KARR translator to Capitol Hill. Perhaps they will be able to block out Victoria and, uh, Central Park (!) better this way? I dunno. Pretty crowded frequency.
At some point here in Bremerton we're about to lose CKKQ, because KBRO 1490 has a construction permit for a translator on 100.3 FM. It'll mark their return to the FM band since they were on 106.9 FM many moons ago before I was even born.
Are you referring to the complaints about Canadian signals being covered up? As long as the U.S. and Canada keep covering up each other's signals, these complaints will continue. Yes, I do see complaints from DXers about domestic signals covering each other up, but it's far more common, at least on this board, to see complaints about signals from Canada being covered by stations nobody listens to. The only signal of any reasonable size from Victoria that hasn't been covered up yet is CHBE 107.3, which is the smallest of the commercial signals in that market. I am too far north to get the KPLU translator at 92.1, but I did notice a bit of a degraded signal from Victoria after that signed on. I'm a little surprised that KNBQ and CIOC don't clash more on 98.5 which I think is plenty of space, and I started an entire thread on one of the other boards after I found out what happened to 100.3. Can anyone think of a domestic situation where this has happened, particularly on the scale we're seeing? The only one I can think of, which I've already mentioned on this board, is Bill W's 106.1 interfering with KBKS in the Willapa Valley. Even then, most Seattle signals are DX-grade there anyway, and this is only one station, not the entire dial. If you count the new Astoria stations over the years, that's a few more, but in those cases I don't think many people in Astoria would think to listen to Seattle stations because of the distance. That being said, if you're in Astoria directly, Seattle stations do come in. In that case though, as soon as you get off the bridge into Washington, you lose them all, which isn't going to happen with local signals. You do also have KGHO-LP covering KISW, and you have translators covering Portland stations in Eugene. The Eugene case is one I need to study a bit better though, and is probably the closest domestic example I can think of.
When I was in Bellingham last year, I only received a very marginal signal from CKKS-2. Otherwise, Movin was dominant the whole time.The fact of the matter is that radio stations are not spread out the way that they used to be a long time ago, and isn't limited to LPFM's in the USA. When CISF 107.7 signed on to serve the city of Surrey, some listeners in the lower mainland objected because they could no longer receive KNDD from Seattle. Similarly, CKKS operates a translator on 92.5 to serve Abbotsford, when there really doesn't seem to be that much of a need for it (though 104.9 does become multipathed as you head east). This translator in particular is dominate over KQMV in much of Whatcom County, including the city of Bellingham. Speaking only of US examples, I know that a lot of people were upset with the proposed FM translator for KKNW, as it would interfere with KXXO.
We all know that the business of AM radio is becoming increasingly tough. However, handing out FM translators comes with a cost as well. Additionally, I really don't understand the rationale for handing out some of these LP stations. 101.9 in Bellevue, for example, has already been hacked multiple times, and 95.3 in Seattle seems unwilling to follow some of the most basic of broadcast standards.
When I was in Bellingham last year, I only received a very marginal signal from CKKS-2. Otherwise, Movin was dominant the whole time.