When I look at radio stations that still have three-letter call signs and yet have low power, or sign off at sunset, I wonder why their owners never got an upgrade from the FCC during all those years.
WEW comes to mind first. It was early enough to get assigned only 3 call letters, and even though it's licensed to St. Louis, it got a W call sign, instead of a K, again evidence that it signed on when the K/W dividing line was hundreds of miles west of the Mississippi. WEW has low power and signs off at sunset.
WIL-AM, also licensed to St. Louis, was also not very high powered, although it was a 24 hour operation. At least KSD-AM, St. Louis' other 3-letter call station, has good coverage with 5000 watts at a low frequency. Of course, KMOX was an early St. Louis station and that was able to get on a clear channel frequency.
How about WOL Washington, which is on 1400, a Class IV frequency where stations only have a maximum of 1000 watts. Why no upgrade over all those years, when newer station signed on at lower frequencies in the nation's capital and got 5000 watts or more?
KXA in Seattle was on 770, a clear channel frequency, but I suppose had to protect WABC NYC and KOB Albuquerque. It had to sign off at sunset till a decade or two ago, when it got 24 authorization from the FCC. (It's now KTTH.)
If these stations have been around so long, how did they get shortchanged? Did the FCC never grant them improvements? Did their owners never apply to the FCC for more power and coverage?
Gregg
[email protected]
WEW comes to mind first. It was early enough to get assigned only 3 call letters, and even though it's licensed to St. Louis, it got a W call sign, instead of a K, again evidence that it signed on when the K/W dividing line was hundreds of miles west of the Mississippi. WEW has low power and signs off at sunset.
WIL-AM, also licensed to St. Louis, was also not very high powered, although it was a 24 hour operation. At least KSD-AM, St. Louis' other 3-letter call station, has good coverage with 5000 watts at a low frequency. Of course, KMOX was an early St. Louis station and that was able to get on a clear channel frequency.
How about WOL Washington, which is on 1400, a Class IV frequency where stations only have a maximum of 1000 watts. Why no upgrade over all those years, when newer station signed on at lower frequencies in the nation's capital and got 5000 watts or more?
KXA in Seattle was on 770, a clear channel frequency, but I suppose had to protect WABC NYC and KOB Albuquerque. It had to sign off at sunset till a decade or two ago, when it got 24 authorization from the FCC. (It's now KTTH.)
If these stations have been around so long, how did they get shortchanged? Did the FCC never grant them improvements? Did their owners never apply to the FCC for more power and coverage?
Gregg
[email protected]