October 11th is the San Diego Yacht Rock Festival headlined by Ambrosia, and emceed by Captain Adam of Yacht Rock Radio. However, there is no Yacht Rock specialty show currently being aired here. The last one was on KFBG until the format change.
You're referring to the music specialty programming as having no money in it, right? Then why does this type programming continue on large market music FM's? Some have multiple shows that air on a Sunday night. How much money would airing the Yacht Rock Radio program cost in the first place. It's a dead zone for listening, so offer something different for a niche audience that can be done without a budget involved, like syndicated shows.As we've said, because there's no money in it. Unless you charge people admission. Tickets to the festival are $130.
You're referring to the music specialty programming as having no money in it, right? Then why does this type programming continue on large market music FM's? Some have multiple shows that air on a Sunday night. How much money would airing the Yacht Rock Radio program cost in the first place.
On night skywave. It's 10 mV/m groundwave coverage does not even cover 100% of the Nashville market, just like WSB in Atlanta.I pick up WSM here in NE Ohio with nary a problem.
Yes, the FCC has a set of charts in the rules (Also seen in the NAB Engineering Handbooks) that show the equivalent of coverage vs conductivity for each small range of frequencies. The FCC also has charts of the ground conductivity in rather broad regions of the United States.I asked you this somewhere on RD recently but don't think you noticed the question. Is there a known formula for calculating these equivalencies exactly? Something one can just plug a low frequency, a wattage figure, and a high frequency into, and get back the exact "equivalent wattage" figure for the high frequency?
Maybe the WSM fans should move to NE Ohio, then they too could have nary a problem receiving it.On night skywave. It's 10 mV/m groundwave coverage does not even cover 100% of the Nashville market, just like WSB in Atlanta.
But only at night.Maybe the WSM fans should move to NE Ohio, then they too could have nary a problem receiving it.
Then WSM could save 50 KWH's on their electric bill by keeping the transmitter off until sundown. How's that for a win-win?But only at night.![]()