DavidEduardo said:cyberdad said:Well, now we apparently know why XERF hasn't bothered to restore full authorized power.
Remember, in its day (50's well into the 80's) XERF only operated from sunset to sunrise.
The business model depended on mail order and donations. When most people moved to FM for music, and religious programs became more available on local AMs, the business model failed.
XERF went broke. The owner could not pay its taxes, and the Mexican government seized it and gave it to the official IMER organization to run. The first decision was to remake the skywave giant that had been selling prayer table cloths and resurrection plants to rural America. The new XERF was a local Ciudad Acuña area station.
Originally, they put a 100 kw transmitter in, thinking they would serve vast areas of Coahuila state. The bureaucrats, of course, did not know that 100 kw in the near-desert areas of northern Coahuila did not go very far on high-band 1570. And with Mexican television penetration virtually total, nobody listened at night.
So they turned the transmitter down. And now they are going to be a nice, local FM. As they should have been all along.
Still waiting for my crate of baby chicks that I ordered from The Wolfman ;D