All you folks in engineering I hope you get through this bad weather. Man I'm glad not to be on call.
600kogo said:You know 3-4 inches of rain here in Texas is called lunch time. In San Diego its called a flood?? I guess Albert Hammond was right? But all I do know is that 4 inches of rain "shouldnt" knock station off the air if it does there needs to be some new engineers in San Diego!
600kogo said:You know 3-4 inches of rain here in Texas is called lunch time. In San Diego its called a flood?? I guess Albert Hammond was right? But all I do know is that 4 inches of rain "shouldnt" knock station off the air if it does there needs to be some new engineers in San Diego!
600kogo said:I never said the amount of rain was not normal, but what I am saying is that if a station has a decent generator then there is no good reason that a station should pop off the air when it is only rain, and a mere 7 inches of it.
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Any other reason would be poor engineering, or cheap owners that wont spend money!
radiode said:Who requires KOGO and KLSD have generators and why?
radiode said:CC paid a large amount of money for the generator and UPS at Granite Ridge Drive with no taxpayer financing. It was strictly a business decision and having all three, (at that time), EAS primary stations in the building played no part in it.
Question: Does anyone else see the logical disconnect of having all three, (now two), SD EAS Primary stations in one location?
600kogo said:The Feds also did not pay for the generators at Emerald Hills or 52nd street (KOGO and KGB transmitters). Although I am sure that Clear Channel would happily have taken the money from them! In fact Chris due to the ridiculous California clean air laws the CC generators can run no more than a certain amount of hours a month, and if they go over California gives them a hefty fine! So California cound not give a darn if KOGO or KLSD are on the air as long as those Diesel generators dont polute too much. Although most of the vehicles in Mexico don't even have exhaust pipes!
600kogo said:And there has never been an earthquake in San Diego that has knocked a station off of the air in San Diego yet anyway! If a quake hit that would knock a station off the air then the towers would be knocked off their bases. A quake that strong would leave San Diego in ruins, and there would not be many radios left to tune into whats left of KOGO or any other station!
600kogo said:And by the way there are NOW earthquakes in the midwest and south, and we have had some tremors in Texas! Ask any engineer what they would rather deal with an extremely rare rain storm in San Diego or a lightning, thunder, rain storm that could be a hurricane!
600kogo said:There is a reason it costs so much to live in San Diego.....The weather!!! Which means that engineering for radio is WAYYYY easier than it is in the midwest, south, and east!
Transmitter failures in San Diego are due to natural failures of components not weather related events.