Just to prove some of you wrong and that radio isnt a vast wasteland, i have two examples for you
Freak May snowstorm knocks out power to nearly 15,000 of the 30,000 residents in Laramie, WY when heavy wet snow took out trees and branches.
Most stations are without power.. but KLMI-FM is on the air with an auto fail over generator at the studio that starts up in less than 60 seconds even though UPS will hold the studio and rack for 10-20 minutes. A Battery back up at the on channel booster site is available and texts go out if mains power is lost and the battery back up goes on over there.
If all hell broke loose and the on channel booster loses power, theres a SHTF 300W transmitter and one bay antenna on the roof of the studio. (The main rarely loses power but is terrain shadowed from the city)
Whos in the studio at 1030 at night on the air giving out info in his PJ's? The owner.
I'm on facebook keeping an eye on social media posts from locals people, governments and stuff
Where I am now... flooding is a problem when the river starts flowing again. it happened 2 years ago here and I was new to the job still, barely 6 months in.. i was on the air several times between 9 and 1130pm relaying information called into me by our city administrator and state cop, then I went to bed.
I was then on the air on and off at least twice an hour between 6am and 3pm with details on what was flooded, impassable, and other information. Didn't care who or what was on the air, I'd fire off a news sounder and let it play a few seconds to grab peoples attention and then go on air with whatever info I had.
This past spring I was on the air just past midnight when water was just starting to make it on the road off the south end of our runway when our state trooper called me to let me know. Then I hopped on my ATV to head down and take a picture.
There are many radio stations who still provide this public service and many who don't. Radio responds to what its audience wants, needs and advertisers will pay for. I do see some average joes complaining now and then about a lack of coverage, but mostly.. its radio geeks complaining about what radio isnt doing.
And then they use that slanted opinion to paint a broad brush.
I will NOT work for any stations who won't let me do and wont be a part of coverage like I described above. Which is why I'm still here after 3 years, because i get to do what I feel is right.
If our tower at KSKO were to collapse or some other failure, I have 75 feet of cable, a back up transmitter and one bay dipole and i could get KSKO back on air in about 2-3 hours, maybe less as long as I had an internet connection
Freak May snowstorm knocks out power to nearly 15,000 of the 30,000 residents in Laramie, WY when heavy wet snow took out trees and branches.
Most stations are without power.. but KLMI-FM is on the air with an auto fail over generator at the studio that starts up in less than 60 seconds even though UPS will hold the studio and rack for 10-20 minutes. A Battery back up at the on channel booster site is available and texts go out if mains power is lost and the battery back up goes on over there.
If all hell broke loose and the on channel booster loses power, theres a SHTF 300W transmitter and one bay antenna on the roof of the studio. (The main rarely loses power but is terrain shadowed from the city)
Whos in the studio at 1030 at night on the air giving out info in his PJ's? The owner.
I'm on facebook keeping an eye on social media posts from locals people, governments and stuff
Where I am now... flooding is a problem when the river starts flowing again. it happened 2 years ago here and I was new to the job still, barely 6 months in.. i was on the air several times between 9 and 1130pm relaying information called into me by our city administrator and state cop, then I went to bed.
I was then on the air on and off at least twice an hour between 6am and 3pm with details on what was flooded, impassable, and other information. Didn't care who or what was on the air, I'd fire off a news sounder and let it play a few seconds to grab peoples attention and then go on air with whatever info I had.
This past spring I was on the air just past midnight when water was just starting to make it on the road off the south end of our runway when our state trooper called me to let me know. Then I hopped on my ATV to head down and take a picture.
There are many radio stations who still provide this public service and many who don't. Radio responds to what its audience wants, needs and advertisers will pay for. I do see some average joes complaining now and then about a lack of coverage, but mostly.. its radio geeks complaining about what radio isnt doing.
And then they use that slanted opinion to paint a broad brush.
I will NOT work for any stations who won't let me do and wont be a part of coverage like I described above. Which is why I'm still here after 3 years, because i get to do what I feel is right.
If our tower at KSKO were to collapse or some other failure, I have 75 feet of cable, a back up transmitter and one bay dipole and i could get KSKO back on air in about 2-3 hours, maybe less as long as I had an internet connection