TheBigA said:
kenglish said:
Or, could it be that they are REMOVING all the fluorescent ones, and going back to "old-fashioned" (but quiet) incandescents?
Wow! I can only hope.
Nope...a new law took effect Jan 1 that makes the old fashioned incandescents illegal.
Actually A, you're close. The date has been pushed back to October this year and the cutback in sales will be incremental.
Dave Eduardo said:
For reliable daytime service, there are not that many US stations that get good signals into of Canada. The parts of Canada that adjoin Maine, VT, NY and upstate NY either are Francophone or not near any major, listenable US stations. Except for the Windsor, Vancouver and Niagara Falls, not much of interest hits Canada with a good, good signal... and the US signals that do get there (like KFYR, etc.,) are either so centered on the US or are so small they are on satellite or have little news and information. Yes, a few exceptions, but you won't find that much listening to US AM radio going on in Canada partly because Canada has made AM quite obsolete.
You covered the bases quite well on this, David. I'd only add that Buffalo AM and FM stations "cross the boarder" quite effectively. WGR with 5kw on 550, WBEN with 5kw on 930 and WNED-AM with 5kW highly directional north on 970 each break into Toronto, population 5+ million very well. Even some of the Class D's make it across the border, daytime. Night time, you could shoot a hockey puck further. Ironically, the 50kw blowtorch once known as WKBW (now WWKB) is so directional that it only skirts Ontario's Niagara Peninsula and has a better signal at night in Montreal than it does in Toronto, a mere 40 miles across lake Ontario.
The Buffalo Class B FMs also penetrate Canadian airspace fairly well. The problem, however, is the the CRTC has licensed lower power FMs in many cases on second, and in some cases in the lower end of the FM band (88.1 - 91.9, considered "non com" in the US, but quite commercial in Canada) first adjacent channels.
There's quite a bit of RF cross pollination, which often makes for diverse listening. Canadian signals from Niagara Falls, Ontario, Hamilton and Toronto are easily heard "south of the border." Toronto is a world class city and aside from the Can-Con music influence, the air personalities also offer a different perspective. Toronto is a BBM (Bureau of Broadcast Measurement) market which employs a PPM type of audience measurement.
With much of that FM RF coming off the CN Tower, it can get quite messy. Buffalo and Western New York share similar traits with Detroit / Windsor as to US-Canadian signal saturation. We who live and work here sometimes take it for granted that we can hear a representation of a different culture at the tips of our fingers. A drive along the Niagara River reveals not another state or county, but a sovereign country. Pretty damn impressive when you think about it. We're good neighbors at that, except perhaps when the Buffalo Sabres play the 'Leafs or Canadiens.
Radio junkies who visit are often fascinated with what can be heard on Canadian radio (English and/or French, FM or AM) and very soon become aware of the fact that Canada isn't our 51st state. Anybody who crosses the border, and most of us do quite regularly, gets an up-close view of that reality.
Back to this discussion about AM's future, I'd ask only this question: If you had the money, would you buy an AM? And ten years down the line, could you sell it (for what you think it'd be worth)?