dxer2_2000 said:
Do they have a system like that in the US or are they just allocated wherever there is space?
These days they go wherever there's space, but the plan evolved over the years...
Firstly, frequencies between 88 and 92MHz are reserved for non-commercial stations. Secondly, a "table of allotments" exists - a list of frequencies assigned for use in specific cities. For example, 92.9/95.5/97.9/103.3/105.9MHz are assigned for use in Nashville, Tenn. An original table was created by government engineering staff, though today almost all of the original channels are in use and any new station uses a frequency added to the table as the result of a private petition.
Thirdly, for many years commercial FM stations were divided into classes. Class A stations were limited to 3,000 watts at a maximum antenna height of 300 feet. Class B stations (assigned in the densely populated Northeast and California) are limited to 50,000 watts/500', and Class C stations (assigned elsewhere) to 100,000 watts/2,000'. Several frequencies - 92.1/ 92.7/ 93.5/ 94.3/ 95.3/ 95.9/ 96.7/ 97.7/ 98.3/ 99.3/ 100.1/ 100.9/ 101.7/ 102.3/ 103.1/ 103.9/ 104.9/ 105.5/ 106.3/ 107.1MHz - were reserved for Class A operation only - no Class B/C stations on these frequencies - and no Class A stations on any other frequency. Finally, it was determined that stations in the same city must be at least 0.8MHz apart.
The 0.8MHz separation allows for two possible plans that allow the maximum number of Class B/C stations in a city:
92.3/93.1/93.9/94.7/...105.9/106.7/107.5 , and
92.5/93.3/94.1/94.9/...106.1/106.9/107.7MHz
You will find the first plan in use in New York, Detroit, Chicago, and Los Angeles. The second plan, with some modifications, exists in Philadelphia, Seattle, and San Francisco.
There are two other possible plans that maximize the number of stations in a city, but these plans would have 8 and 12 respectively Class A assignments. The FCC tried to avoid mixing Class A and Class B/C channels in the same city, so these plans were not used.
Any order fell apart pretty quickly though, as it was necessary to allow for other cities close enough to the very largest to be subject to interference but not close enough to receive service. To add to the chaos, in 1980 the government lifted the distinction between Class A and Class B/C channels, allowing any class on any frequency.
Today, there is no order. If you can fit it in without causing interference, you're in business.