cyberdad said:Tonight I'm in a hotel by Sea-Tac airport in Seattle, and all I'm getting is splatter from KIRO. Last night I was in Vancouver, BC and getting splatter from their local 730. So apparently I was too close to the respective local sticks to get a feel for how well KCBS is doing (or not doing) in the Pacific Northwest.
cd637299 said:
cd637299 said:cyberdad said:Tonight I'm in a hotel by Sea-Tac airport in Seattle, and all I'm getting is splatter from KIRO. Last night I was in Vancouver, BC and getting splatter from their local 730. So apparently I was too close to the respective local sticks to get a feel for how well KCBS is doing (or not doing) in the Pacific Northwest.
Ah, AM 730 Vancouver, the future of AM radio, very likely! www.am730.ca
cd
cd637299 said:cyberdad said:Tonight I'm in a hotel by Sea-Tac airport in Seattle, and all I'm getting is splatter from KIRO. Last night I was in Vancouver, BC and getting splatter from their local 730. So apparently I was too close to the respective local sticks to get a feel for how well KCBS is doing (or not doing) in the Pacific Northwest.
Ah, AM 730 Vancouver, the future of AM radio, very likely! www.am730.ca
cd
cyberdad said:cd637299 said:cyberdad said:Tonight I'm in a hotel by Sea-Tac airport in Seattle, and all I'm getting is splatter from KIRO. Last night I was in Vancouver, BC and getting splatter from their local 730. So apparently I was too close to the respective local sticks to get a feel for how well KCBS is doing (or not doing) in the Pacific Northwest.
Ah, AM 730 Vancouver, the future of AM radio, very likely! www.am730.ca
cd
Surprisingly, I found myself tuning in yesterday while dealing with Vancouver traffic. Everything repeats every five or six minutes, but it IS live. They also provide wait times for the U.S. border crossings (a half hour south of town) and capacity info for the ferry sailings to Vancouver Island (Victoria). I can tell you from experience that this can be handy stuff.
But great radio it is not!
cyberdad said:cd.... I didn't see any street signs for 730. It's definitely a commercial operation, but they didn't seem to have a particularly heavy commercial load.
The thing about Vancouver is that it's basically a bunch of islands, peninsulas, etc. connected by a network of bridges. The bridges become bottlenecks during rush hour, and most of the bridges have alternative crossings. So...what happens is it becomes useful to know if your usual bridge is backed up, then what's the deal with the alternates. Same goes with the U.S. border crossings south of town. At one point yesterday, wait times ranged from an hour to five minutes (I have an iPhone app that also provides/confirmed this).
As for the ferries, nice to know if the one you're racing to meet is full or not. Depending on the time of day, they run every half hour or hour. They give you the percent full for each of the next two or three, so you can which one to use without having to wait for the next one. The ferries are great....waiting an hour at the landing is not. Been there, done that!
Back on topic, I went back to 740 last night in my Seattle hotel room. KCBS was there this time (9:30pm), but weak, and fighting it out with something else....presumably CBX.
schmave said:cyberdad said:cd.... I didn't see any street signs for 730. It's definitely a commercial operation, but they didn't seem to have a particularly heavy commercial load.
The thing about Vancouver is that it's basically a bunch of islands, peninsulas, etc. connected by a network of bridges. The bridges become bottlenecks during rush hour, and most of the bridges have alternative crossings. So...what happens is it becomes useful to know if your usual bridge is backed up, then what's the deal with the alternates. Same goes with the U.S. border crossings south of town. At one point yesterday, wait times ranged from an hour to five minutes (I have an iPhone app that also provides/confirmed this).
As for the ferries, nice to know if the one you're racing to meet is full or not. Depending on the time of day, they run every half hour or hour. They give you the percent full for each of the next two or three, so you can which one to use without having to wait for the next one. The ferries are great....waiting an hour at the landing is not. Been there, done that!
Back on topic, I went back to 740 last night in my Seattle hotel room. KCBS was there this time (9:30pm), but weak, and fighting it out with something else....presumably CBX.
I still think this format would work in a city like Houston, where rush hour lasts for three hours or more morning and night and the major "news/talk" station is news in name only. In a city with a full-time news station, like Chicago or New York, it wouldn't be necessary.
schmave said:I still think this format would work in a city like Houston, where rush hour lasts for three hours or more morning and night and the major "news/talk" station is news in name only. In a city with a full-time news station, like Chicago or New York, it wouldn't be necessary.
purpledevil said:schmave said:cyberdad said:cd.... I didn't see any street signs for 730. It's definitely a commercial operation, but they didn't seem to have a particularly heavy commercial load.
The thing about Vancouver is that it's basically a bunch of islands, peninsulas, etc. connected by a network of bridges. The bridges become bottlenecks during rush hour, and most of the bridges have alternative crossings. So...what happens is it becomes useful to know if your usual bridge is backed up, then what's the deal with the alternates. Same goes with the U.S. border crossings south of town. At one point yesterday, wait times ranged from an hour to five minutes (I have an iPhone app that also provides/confirmed this).
As for the ferries, nice to know if the one you're racing to meet is full or not. Depending on the time of day, they run every half hour or hour. They give you the percent full for each of the next two or three, so you can which one to use without having to wait for the next one. The ferries are great....waiting an hour at the landing is not. Been there, done that!
Back on topic, I went back to 740 last night in my Seattle hotel room. KCBS was there this time (9:30pm), but weak, and fighting it out with something else....presumably CBX.
I still think this format would work in a city like Houston, where rush hour lasts for three hours or more morning and night and the major "news/talk" station is news in name only. In a city with a full-time news station, like Chicago or New York, it wouldn't be necessary.
Off topic and my apologies, but we do have one schmave...well, sort of. AM 1680 is the Texas Dept. of Public Safety's traffic and emergency station for metro Houston. Not the greatest reception in certain areas around town, but it does exist. I couldn't imagine where a full time traffic station could go on our dial. We only have one 50kW station at night, and that's KTRH. Any other AM would not cover the entire metropolitan area for this type of service.