Radioman100 said:
The anti-IBOC crowd tries to present an altruistic front to the world. You claim you don't want IBOC because it supposedly interferes. I'm betting there would be a lot less interference on the AM band if all stations turned on or upgraded since '75 or so were turned off. I think it's funny that the only publicly anti-HD station I know of is a late coming interference generator in its own right...
Well I suppose that
I’m one who survived initiation into the
Anti-IBOC [AM] fraternity [where they swing buzz-saws instead of paddles

]; so I’ll beg you to recall this “crowd-member’s” very-simple take on an AM crowd of a different making...
hipporadio said:
DavidEduardo said:
Crippled AMs are not generally viable in the major markets to begin with... And they make lousy HD facilities.
So shut them off and "thin the herd". The FCC permitted that "herd" to become unmanageable in the first place...
I understand that a simple idea often keeps company with complex and hotly-contested implementation, so we’ll leave that to another day and several-dozen new threads. Suffice to say, the infamous “marketplace” [along with a dash of regulatory gusto] may in time force that herd into some basic Darwinism.
For the record –
I have been opposed since the 70s [in many cases “on the record”] to ALL the following FCC-enabled “AM initiatives”...
1—“New and improved” Class 2 DAYTIMERS [of the 10, 25, and even 50kW stature] on clear channels – get-it-on FULLTIME, or don’t get-your-jollies at all!
2—“Flea-power” [of the 5 and 15-watt flavor at night] used by the former Class 2s on clear channels – VERY LITTLE [if anything] gained by the perpetrators, but [cumulatively] quite a bit lost by those formerly-protected... Keep-it-up
fulltime with acceptable-virility – or get-it-off at night [please pardon the double-entendre]
3—“Rabbit-power” [the infamous 27, 38, and 49-watters] on the former Class 3 “regional” channels – loveable by day, but prone to multiple forms of mischief after sunset – especially when the “High/Low-Power” relay so-often gets conveniently-stuck on the former during a high-school basketball game – eventually becoming S.O.P as its replacement lingered on “backorder”. I was more in-favor of a FIRM 500-watt PSA/PSSA – rational service from 6AM-7PM, then bye-bye birdie!
4—Class desegregation as it’s
related to operation at elevated and sometimes very-high power levels [even up to 50kW] on the former Class 3 channels. While most were maxed-out at the former 5kW limit, some won the lottery and cranked up –
waaay up to a point that makes their operation
obscene during critical-hours. Here are three illustrative examples and perennial offenders – regardless of season, sunspots, and other DX conditions: 1260 WXYT Detroit; 1290 WHKY Hickory, NC; and 1300 WNQM Nashville. I have heard these stations
repeatedly-plaster [and render
unusable] the 5kW large-market signals of WNDE – Indianapolis; WHIO – Dayton, OH; and WLXG – Lexington, KY during the two-hour periods after daybreak and before sunset at locations considered “ex-urban” [NOT “fringe”] to their TX sites. Mention this trespass to any engineer at the offended station, and you’ll get the “
I know” and rolling-eyes response. All the “Perps” of this mischief were allowed a hike to 50kW that allegedly looked “
just fine” on paper – Perp #1 even maintains its 50kw “blow-torch” FULL-TIME, and
soon will become an “HD buzz-saw blow-torch”... WXYT is owned by that
little radio concern known as CBS!
5—‘Remember the “expanded band” and all the interference that was to subside within the “old AM band” seven-years hence? Then recall all the “juicy” 10kW allocations that were
snatched and moved into corporate clusters many-hundreds of miles away... Can you say “Hot-lanta!” and the central-Georgia jigsaw; or WRLL—re-licensed to the “
non-urbanized and underserved” community of Berwyn, IL [correction—CHICAGO] in a brilliant stroke of CCU legalese that later-provided the president for a HUGE shift in local
FM radio service to stables in much-larger markets. Furthermore, the move of 1690 by CCU from downstate Johnston City, IL – provided reason-enough for the formerly-offending 810 WDDD to remain on the air and continue to transmit the “interference” that earlier-earned it a slot in the X-band. And how many other “old-banders” actually shut-off after their nice dose of corporate welfare? VERY FEW – assuming that I can count correctly to about seven! Corporate broadcasting and the NAB were also
instrumental in that “smooth move”—one that virtually double-dipped the taxpayer for a second corporate trip to the cash till!
6—I'm saving the very-best for last... A shameless self-promoting game of
nearly-exclusive corporate radio Chess involving AM facility moves –
which literally sacrifices the AM band to enrich FM-fortune in large markets. How else could you possibly justify the following: 1360 KELE – Mountain Grove, MO [“fulltime” with 60-watts at night] gets the
urge to move over 500-miles
[!] from the Ozarks of south-central Missouri –
three states east to become “remaining local service” in little Ripley, OH [which just happens to be ex-urban to Cincinnati and has an FM on 99.5]. Seems that FM could be moved [with a C.O.L. change] to near-the-outer-beltway of the big-town; but a pesky problem persists – Ripley needs replacement service, and earlier attempts to conjure one up have failed to fly the FCC’s kite. Not to worry... The
Executive-Branch FCC seems to reinvent corporate welfare on a weekly basis... KELE will become Ripley’s replacement – despite its frequency shift to 1180 and
NO provision for night-service at any level. An interesting issue remains... I thought no further authorizations of AM service would be granted
unless they were “
fulltime” – ‘guess that’s just a
trivial technicality when the ultimate recipient of the FCC’s
look in the other direction is First Media of TEXAS. BTW – to equate First Media with “corporate radio” might be blasphemous to the latter. “First” is little-more than a commodity-trader... Instead of beans, barrows ‘n gilts – it’s paper with the proper regulatory stamp. Altruistic benefits to Ripley aside – use of 1180 there,
severely-degrades three existing [and easily-received] stations: 1190 WOWO, 1170 WWVA, and most-unfortunately 1160 WDJO—a full 5kW and only 40 miles to the southwest with a directional-lobe equivalent of about 11kW toward Ripley. So how can this be? I did remind you that
First Media hails from TEXAS [where “everything’s bigger”]; and we all know that “size matters” in the office of the FCC’s
ultimate Commander.
We’ve all witnessed the woeful results of these incremental band-aids and corporate entitlement programs: an AM band that has “evolved” to the level of a purposely-engineered Cranberry bog. If “life imitates art”, these corporate radio types and their “HD” shills are in desperate need of an intervention – from an entity unrelated to casino gambling, commodity-trading, and creative accounting. Radioman... To infer that “the anti-IBOC crowd” has dirty hands is
outrageous! Oh just behold the sight of those stained CCU, Cloud-Nine, See-BS [and other] fingers so many times caught picking cherries from the pie! They are the overwhelming beneficiaries of the opportunities provided by several of the “AM initiatives” detailed above – especially the most-destructive dalliances detailed in numbers 4, 5, and 6... NOT the creative Mr. Savage; dumber [in New England]; the delightfully-cynical SUPER, the affable Tom Wells; net-surfing vsa; assorted Racket players; even pocketradio [who prefers dissing “HD” at the Circuit City and Crutchfield sites] – and certainly-not your warm ‘n fuzzy UncleHippo here 8)