mimo said:
I thought I read somewhere that CBEF will remain on AM and the FM will be changed into a nested repeater. I think what Cyber has said was probably the reasoning behind it. It would make much more sense to actually switch those CBCs back to AM and free up a LOT of frequencies for other use, not to mention the cost in buying, installing and maintaining so many transmitters for one small area.
Yes, that's what I've heard as well -- that 540 will remain on the air.
The reason for moving the CBCs to FM is the same as why we're seeing a flood of U.S. news/talk stations moving to FM: the signals are simply better in the typical noisy home/urban environment, and fewer and fewer people are bothering to try AM. That, and in most cases the CBC already has an available transmission site & antenna, it doesn't cost much to add another frequency.
I would imagine there are a couple of reasons why some of them haven't flipped to FM:
- It would take too many FMs (too much $$) to replicate the AM coverage.
(990/540/1010/740 in the Prairies)
- There aren't enough frequencies available for enough FMs to replicate the AM coverage.
(Windsor 540, Toronto 860)
- Terrain is impossible for FM.
(Vancouver 690, various transmitters in NL,. maybe CBI?)
I'd be VERY surprised if any of those that have gone FM go back to AM.
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jd: "Nested Repeaters" are FM relay stations that operate fully within the coverage area of the AM station they relay. Examples include:
102.3 & 105.5 Windsor (relaying 1550 & 540 respectively. I believe the former was never built, and it's definitely unnecessary today due to 97.5.)
89.3 & 90.5 Winnipeg (relaying 990 & 1050 respectively)
99.1 Calgary (relaying 1010)
Contrast with straight "repeaters" which relay a signal (AM or FM) into an area beyond the coverage of the station being relayed. Examples would include 89.9 Paris (relays 90.3 Toronto), 106.3 Peterborough (relays 860 Toronto), and 99.5 Brandon, Manitoba. (relays Winnipeg 1050)