BobOnTheJob said: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.
http://www.cincinnativiews.net/alms_hotel.htm
Here's a quote from a recent post on another topic:
Title: Re: Best signal in Cincinnati
Post by: Cincinnati Kid on April 17, 2009, 03:18:59 pm
I think WKRC 550-AM is probably not thought of as a powerful station in connection with some of the others in Cincinnati. However, during the day, it really seems to get out well. I remember being in south-central Kentucky in the early 1960's and with a regular plug-in table model AM radio, I listened to the University of Cincinnati football and basketball games on WKRC. In doing that, it was important to get away from florescent lighting and other interference such as the the whine put out by TV sets. Back then, WKRC had its towers on top of the Hotel Alms in the Walnut Hills section of the city.
I doubt WTVN was a protection issues since it was down the dial a bit. However, co-owned and co-channel WGR would be protected.