I'm surprised in this day and age those call letters would be allowed.I noticed that North Greenville University has a LPFM on 95.5, WNGR. Does anyone know if it's still on the air?
I'm surprised in this day and age those call letters would be allowed.I noticed that North Greenville University has a LPFM on 95.5, WNGR. Does anyone know if it's still on the air?
There is no §73.809 overlap as is the case with WMXP-LP. They may choose to change channels if any is available or voluntarily go off the air, but under §73.809, WLTE does not have a valid displacement case. (LPFM interfering contour must overlap the full-service 70 dBu).I noticed that North Greenville University has a LPFM on 95.5, WNGR. Does anyone know if it's still on the air?

95.3 & 95.7 are still short-spaced to WLTE. 95.3 is also short-spaced to WNKS & WWOK-LP. 95.9 is short-spaced to WPLS-LP & WHQC. Like WMXP-LP, WNGR-LP has no channels to change to anywhere in the band.WNGR is probably off for the summer. The university advertises the station as part of their communication program. There's a lot of terrain between TIgerville and the WLTE, so they could probably move to 95.3, 95.7, or 95.9 without much issue.
Agree. I was expecting 95.5 to be stronger to the south/southeast than it is, but they're running the max power 6kw for a class A with a rather low antenna which will hurt distance. 103.3 has height on its side with just 2700 ERP. The HD lock on 95.5 stays pretty consistent until the GSP exit on 85 where it croaks and the signal starts to weaken badly. I was able to get it on Georgia Rd in Simpsonville headed toward US-25 with HD locked on. But it makes sense that they encouraged 103.3 listeners to keep listening there.The 95.5 signal, is OK in Greenville — to the west/southwest side of the city. But to be honest, I was hoping 95.5 would be stronger. In areas like Pelham Road and even parts of Laurens Road, 103.3 still comes in stronger. On a trip to Fountain Inn the other day, however, 95.5 really powered in well.
What really surprised me (sort of — I saw the coverage maps) was the loss of a decent signal in Clemson. I was there yesterday, and 95.5 simply doesn't cover as well as 95.9. Effectively, I'd say the signal doesn't cover Clemson at all. At one spot, I could actually get 103.3 about the same as 95.5 (neither was great, however).
I wonder if they are still tweaking the signal?
And they don't account for interference from other stations.which aren't always really accurate outside of the 60dbu
Good to know, because all of the surveys show WLTE 95.5 should have a city grade signal over almost all of Greenville county. I was shocked I couldn’t get it in Greer at all (ok, maybe every 10 seconds it tried to come in). With WMXP off the air, I thought the signal would improve to the east but that only really helped the Laurens/Woodruff/Haywood Rd areas.Spoke to CraigD, one of the brains behind 955/1033, seems the signal is still not completely done being tweaked yet, at least to the east. Next thing to be dealt with is the 95.5 signal from Tigerville which is still an interference issue as well.
Placement of the new transmitter site was carefully considered for all areas involved from Greenville to Anderson and Clemson, but the lingering issues is why Greenville isn't currently mentioned in the 95.5 TOH ID.