firepoint525 said:In Dickson, TN, WDKN-AM 1260, which returned to the air under new owners in 2009 after being off the air for four months, added an FM translator at 101.5 a year or two ago, and their station is now called "the one." That name has been overused in the Nashville area, but I believe that this new translator is primarily heard only in Dickson County. Years ago, WDKN had a full-fledged FM sister station, but like so many small-town FMs, it became a Nashville move-in.
There is also an urban gospel station here in the Nashville area at 102.1 (Nashville) and 101.9 (Clarksville), but probably very few people know about their station at AM 830 that those two re-broadcast.
I am taking this as proof enough that we need to get rid of the outdated requirement that an FM translator cannot reach beyond the daytime reach of its "mother" AM station. This thread alone is proof of that. (And what about FM translators (like WAY-FM's) that are just repeaters for existing FM stations? What is the rule there?)w9wi said:Peripheral to the topic but 101.9/102.1 are now relaying 102.5's HD-2. AM 830 is now simulcasting 102.5's main channel -- I believe, for the benefit of *another* translator, 97.5 in Murfreesboro. I don't think 102.5's 60dBu reaches the Boro so they had to use something else as the primary.firepoint525 said:In Dickson, TN, WDKN-AM 1260, which returned to the air under new owners in 2009 after being off the air for four months, added an FM translator at 101.5 a year or two ago, and their station is now called "the one." That name has been overused in the Nashville area, but I believe that this new translator is primarily heard only in Dickson County. Years ago, WDKN had a full-fledged FM sister station, but like so many small-town FMs, it became a Nashville move-in.
There is also an urban gospel station here in the Nashville area at 102.1 (Nashville) and 101.9 (Clarksville), but probably very few people know about their station at AM 830 that those two re-broadcast.
(and to close the circle... for those outside Nashville, the aforementioned 102.5 is the Nashville move-in that used to be WDKN-FM.....)
Kent said:If I had an AM station on an FM translator, I would only mention the AM in the legal ID. I wouldn't promote it in the least and would never mention the frequency. Only the die hard AM listeners and radio junkies would know anything about it at all. It just makes sense to be an FM station.
firepoint525 said:I am taking this as proof enough that we need to get rid of the outdated requirement that an FM translator cannot reach beyond the daytime reach of its "mother" AM station. This thread alone is proof of that.
(And what about FM translators (like WAY-FM's) that are just repeaters for existing FM stations? What is the rule there?)
There is still that little matter of 102.1 being a translator for 102.5 in the downtown Nashville area for many years, regardless of what the 102.5 format may have been at any given time. We simply could not (and probably still cannot) have a discussion about 102.5 on the Nashville board without someone complaining about their "weak signal." It followed the discussion (of 102.5) like a trailer follows a U-Haul truck.w9wi said:For commercial translators commonly-owned with the station being relayed, it's the same rule as for AM: the translator may not extend the theoretical coverage of the station.
firepoint525 said:It just seems like, under the scenario that you described, that Cromwell turned off "the Light" in Nashville, just so they could play "the Game" in Murfreesboro. But if the Game ever becomes a statewide satellite network, such a shell game will become unnecessary.
firepoint525 said:Agree with you on your parenthetical material at the bottom. When I lived in Clarksville, AM 1550 (which is where they were at the time) simulcasted 102.9, then known as Q-102, all day, except for carrying Rush Limbaugh middays. Yes, Clarksville had its own Limbaugh affiliate back when I lived there.
So what is 102.1 (and for that matter, 101.9) "translating" now?
I lived in the Hilldale area (Ashford Place apartments near Clarksville High School and Richview Middle School), and I could hear him from there. I remember hearing commercials for the Franklin Street Pub there in Clarksville, but that is about it for local advertisers.w9wi said:Interesting. I didn't realize Limbaugh was on 1550. I wonder if anyone outside downtown Clarksville could hear him?firepoint525 said:Agree with you on your parenthetical material at the bottom. When I lived in Clarksville, AM 1550 (which is where they were at the time) simulcasted 102.9, then known as Q-102, all day, except for carrying Rush Limbaugh middays. Yes, Clarksville had its own Limbaugh affiliate back when I lived there.![]()
Can you tell that I don't have an HD radio, and don't know much about one? So is 101.9/102.1's signal going out further than this HD signal, or does that not apply here?So what is 102.1 (and for that matter, 101.9) "translating" now?102.5's HD-2.