WNTIRadio said:I didn't say not to use a single sheet of paper or two a month to check things... I have a log book at every TX site that I write everything down in when I visit them. All TX parameters, remote control calibration, tower lights (when applicable), generator (when applicable) even inside and outside temperature.
What I was speaking of was reams of paper where the jocks are taking readings every single hour. If the remote control is not calibrated, then those won't be worth anything anyway, since they will most likely be taking readings from said remote. That's a waste of time to me. The remote is more descriptive and more accurate when it calls me on a weekend than, "Uh, I think we're off the air. Okay maybe not. Wait, which channel again do you want me to go to? Huh? We have one of those? Ohhhh, right." etc etc.
I can log in or call in and get the whole scoop. And if something does drift out, it'll let me know as soon as it happens.
Well, yeah, if the remote control isn't calibrated the readings won't be very useful. :
But whose job is it to calibrate that?
And if the remote control isn't calibrated, then it won't be any more descriptive and accurate when it calls you on the weekend than it would be if it called them!
And who said anything about taking readings every hour? My personal rule is once per shift. And why not do that? We're paying these guys to be there. They can't pick up the phone one time and call the remote control and write down what it says, following a carefully designed, reasonably idiot-proof procedure? I think they can.
Meanwhile.... you have parameters checked and documented once a week or once every 10 days. Mine are checked and documented several times a day. (And my meters are properly calibrated, by the way.)
They already have to log tower lights and EAS, so you're not really saving anything by interrupting their TV watching to go take some meter readings. It's all a matter of training and setting some reasonable expectations.