Bengalsfan said:You are only required to file a silent STA if you are, or anticipate, being off for longer than 30 days.
And in WCIN's case, they had a nice daytime facility in the 60's, lost the site & their nearly 400' tall towers were rebuilt elsewhere at about 150' with less than 5KW. It was a sad day when that signal went away.skippertthomas said:I reflect that it might a third angle.. Many have been talking about old AM allocations in Milwaukee, Nashville and Atlanta.. Stations like WCIN were put on when Cincy was inside the loop.. Now you have urban sprawl and most of your money people are outside the interstate loop.... Signals used to cover the majority of the Population that was more centered.. Now those populations are spread out as flat as a huge pancake... It's hard to cover the full metro zip codes, these days.....
"Skip" at 910/"TheDuck"
jry said:All true, guys.
I submit that WCIN/WDJO is formatted perfectly for what it covers. Naturally, they could us a little more nighttime.
This current economic downturn will result in a thinning out of some signals, possibly allowing some AM operators to improve their facilities.
It'll be a real "survival of the fittest".
I know that WCVG is not totally up to snuff and doesn't cover all it could.
The question is whether or not someone can buy it cheap enough to do the repairs. Will it be successful when they're done.
When WCLU was in it's heyday (mid-late 1960's with double digit ratings playing Big Clu Country--which all ended when 24/7 1230 WUBE went country in the Spring of 1969), the metro pretty well ended at I-275. The downtown Cincy signal was excellent...seems it was equal to WSAI. The catch was that it was 6AM-Local Sunset. Now the metro has expanded well past 275 in most directions & the 1320 signal just isn't up to the task these days.NoWayNoCC said:Maybe WCVG should just be a Covington station. I don't see the point in trying to cover the whole market with that weak signal. Even when it was WCLU, it had serious signal issues.
major said:jry said:All true, guys.
I submit that WCIN/WDJO is formatted perfectly for what it covers. Naturally, they could us a little more nighttime.
This current economic downturn will result in a thinning out of some signals, possibly allowing some AM operators to improve their facilities.
It'll be a real "survival of the fittest".
I know that WCVG is not totally up to snuff and doesn't cover all it could.
The question is whether or not someone can buy it cheap enough to do the repairs. Will it be successful when they're done.
You are correct. Dick Plessinger told me when he sold the station, that he was going to work on a modification to the signal pattern for an increase in power, and an extra directional lobe to the east. This was an extra $200k cost, to be added to the $1.9 million sale price. Unfortunately, he died shortly after the sale. I do not know how far he got with this, if he even started it.
Bengalsfan said:You don't need an official STA, you just need to notify the FCC if longer than 10 days. Longer than 30 and you need an STA and that's when the clock starts on getting it back on the air within 365 days or losing the license.
gabigley1 said:The FCC database still doesn't show WCVG as being silent. WCVH has been silent for more then ten days now.
Dose the FCC database List 10 day silent notifications?
ncincy1 said:As of this afternoon (Mon. 12/21) 1320 is "back on the air" and broadcasting classic country songs with long intervals of silence.... ???
Bengalsfan said:gabigley1 said:The FCC database still doesn't show WCVG as being silent. WCVH has been silent for more then ten days now.
Dose the FCC database List 10 day silent notifications?
No, it does not. the 10 day notification is informal.
BobOnTheJob said:And in WCIN's case, they had a nice daytime facility in the 60's, lost the site & their nearly 400' tall towers were rebuilt elsewhere at about 150' with less than 5KW. It was a sad day when that signal went away.
Hi Bill,RadioBill said:BobOnTheJob said:And in WCIN's case, they had a nice daytime facility in the 60's, lost the site & their nearly 400' tall towers were rebuilt elsewhere at about 150' with less than 5KW. It was a sad day when that signal went away.
Bob,
Wasn't that the move from Beekman Street (Northside) to Glenwood Ave (Avondale)? On the northwest side of town, both the "old" 1,000w daytime signal and the "new" 500w nightime signal were better than the "new" 5,000w daytime signal. As a kid at the time, I never quite understood that.
Bill
Elephant said:Per a filing on 12/9/09:
THE PARTIES TO THE SUBJECT TRANSACTION HEREBY REQUEST AN ADDITIONAL 90 DAYS, UNTIL MARCH 13, 2010, TO CONSUMMATE THE ASSIGNMENT OF WCIN(AM), CINCINNATI, OH (FIN 32953) FROM AMERICAN BROADCASTING, LLC TO ALCHEMY II BROADCASTING, LLC. ADDITIONAL TIME IS NECESSARY AS THE BUYER HAS NOT YET OBTAINED FINANCING AND THE PARTIES ARE EXPLORING ALTERNATIVE WAYS OF FINANCING THE TRANSACTION.