littlejohn said:I forget what the AM calls were when we (Katz) had the pair. The FM was always WAAF (CRABK IT UP!!!!!)
chris560 said:littlejohn said:I forget what the AM calls were when we (Katz) had the pair. The FM was always WAAF (CRABK IT UP!!!!!)
Weren't the calls WAAB, then WFTQ?
Prais said:Yo skirted answerig my question. When it was WAAF, was the tower site on top of that same building?
DTV-Chief said:The self-supporting tower atop Larkin Bldg. in Buffalo had WYSL AM & FM until AM was relocated to a guyed tower on Grider by the Kensington Expressway. Afterwards FM and aux. AM stayed atop Larkin until FM was also eventually relocated to Grider tower. The self-supporting tower remains atop Larkin Bldg. for other communications purposes.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/thehydraulics/3211493419/in/set-72157612948429654/
http://www.buffaloah.com/a/exch/726/roof/index.html
Scott Fybush said:There were 3 stations that shared time on 1240 in Chicago. All had roof top antennas. In addition to WSBC and WCRW that were mentioned earlier, there was WEDC owned by "Emil Denemark Cadillac" hence the call letters. There studio and transmitter were at the rear of the Cadillac showroom on Ogden Avenue and could be observed easily when driving past. They had a pretty good all night show with classical music from 3 to 4 am.DanStrassberg said:1240 is a couple of miles to the north of 820, and is a conventional base-insulated tower behind a building. Another of the 1240 sites was indeed a rooftop, but is no longer in use.
Yes this is the tower originally used for WEBR and originally erected for AM with base insulators.Mike Sheridan said:DTV-Chief said:The self-supporting tower atop Larkin Bldg. in Buffalo had WYSL AM & FM until AM was relocated to a guyed tower on Grider by the Kensington Expressway. Afterwards FM and aux. AM stayed atop Larkin until FM was also eventually relocated to Grider tower. The self-supporting tower remains atop Larkin Bldg. for other communications purposes.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/thehydraulics/3211493419/in/set-72157612948429654/
http://www.buffaloah.com/a/exch/726/roof/index.html
Wow those are great pictures, nice tower but it sure looks like it needs a good paint job!
I did some digging around once and found the site was originally home to WEBR when it was on 1370. I wonder if it's the same tower? Any idea how old this one is? I remember seeing the WYSL call letters on it.
My apologies, I meant to write "Then Chief Engineer Dick Gideon."I remember when high winds shredded one of the letters. Then Chief Engineer Dick Schuh climbed up with a hacksaw to cut off the dangling pieces so they wouldn't fly off and maybe kill someone.
DTV-Chief said:My apologies, I meant to write "Then Chief Engineer Dick Gideon."I remember when high winds shredded one of the letters. Then Chief Engineer Dick Schuh climbed up with a hacksaw to cut off the dangling pieces so they wouldn't fly off and maybe kill someone.
The AM moved to its Kensington/Grider site while WYSL studios were still on the top floor of the Statler Hilton, before relocating to Franklin St. in 1970. The FM and Aux. AM moved to Grider while still under McLendon ownership, around 1972-74. (Corporate DOE Glenn Callison handled transferring their Larkin tower to landlord Graphic Controls.)Mike Sheridan said:DTV-Chief said:My apologies, I meant to write "Then Chief Engineer Dick Gideon."I remember when high winds shredded one of the letters. Then Chief Engineer Dick Schuh climbed up with a hacksaw to cut off the dangling pieces so they wouldn't fly off and maybe kill someone.
In any case a great historic site, thanks for the information. Do you know when 1400 moved off the tower? I lived out near the KB/WGR site so sometimes getting 1400 was a problem. KB can be clearly heard in the background of the tape I was making of WYSL.
BobOnTheJob said:WKRC 550 had a 2 tower directional array on the Hotel Alms until the summer of 1975 when the current site at Cold Spring,KY was commissioned
I understand your skepticism and while I didn't actually see this in operation, I was on the engineering staff when the shut it down & we activated the new site. I can only go by what I recall. A Google Search for WKRC Hotel Alms did bring this site up, which contains a picture that depicts the 2 self supporting towers. It was decommissioned 34 years ago this summer...hopefully someone who remembers it first hand can fill us in on the particulars. I agree...it seems most unlikely, but I honestly do believe it existed. It had to be directional to minimize the signal toward co-owned WTVN/Columbus and to protect St Louis on 550. There we probably other protections as well. I wonder if there's any archive of past AM facilities on line?DanStrassberg said:BobOnTheJob said:WKRC 550 had a 2 tower directional array on the Hotel Alms until the summer of 1975 when the current site at Cold Spring,KY was commissioned
I've never been to Cincinnati, but I am sekptical that what you believe was a rooftop DA on 550 was a rooftop DA. Given the wavelength at 550 (more than 1/3 mile!), the building would have had to occupy a huge area to get the towers far enough apart for the DA to function even half decently. I know that a few DAs have towers spaced only 45 degrees apart but, spacings of less than 60 degrees are not very common. And the ground system would have required still more real estate. Moreover, 60-degree towers at 550 are ~300' high. Did the towers REALLY add the equivalent of 30 stories to the height of the hotel?
It is much more likely that the towers supported a nondirectional horizontal long-wire stretched between them, with the feed wire dropped from the center of the long-wire, to form a T configuration. A few such AM transmitting antennas remained in use into the 70s. Indeed, I'm told that one of this general type (it's and L rather than a T) is still in use at KYPA in Los Angeles, even though the station has built (and I thought had been granted a license to cover) a conventional vertical antenna comprising (and diplexed from) two of the six towers of a co-owned station. When and if this diplex goes into operation on 1230, it will be the first nighttime DA on a US Class C AM.
Among the stations where long-wires survived until after World War II was KNBR (I guess it was still KPO at that time). At the other end of the power spectrum, there was one until just a few years ago at a Class C AM in western PA, north of Pittsburgh. I've forgotten the CoL and the call sign. I think the station was on 1340.