WDOD, AM1310 signed on the air the same year as WSM-AM - 1925.
Now WDOD is silent.
http://www.chattanoogan.com/articles/article_202677.asp
Now WDOD is silent.
http://www.chattanoogan.com/articles/article_202677.asp
Megacycler said:Bernie Barker, station general manager, said, "The equipment at the station was very old and the parts were hard to get. The components had to be made in some cases."
Anybody know the year, make and model of the transmitter and what they plan on doing with it now?
Megacycler said:Bernie Barker, station general manager, said, "The equipment at the station was very old and the parts were hard to get. The components had to be made in some cases."
Anybody know the year, make and model of the transmitter and what they plan on doing with it now?
Watt Hairston said:We are witnessing the end of a medium, AM radio has pretty much run out of time....
abccbsnbcfox said:Actually, WDOD-AM is older than WSM-AM.
WDOD-AM: April 13, 1925
WSM-AM: October 5, 1925
But nobody beats WNOX-AM, Knoxville: November 19, 1921 (the eighth station to sign on in North America)
StephanieNYC said:Oh bull-hockey. Equipment can be easily replaced/refurbished/upgraded. It's the licence that matters. Someone else could have gotten a chance to get the licence and either moved the facility (or even tried to buy the land).
Kent said:StephanieNYC said:Oh bull-hockey. Equipment can be easily replaced/refurbished/upgraded. It's the licence that matters. Someone else could have gotten a chance to get the licence and either moved the facility (or even tried to buy the land).
Umm...you're kidding, right? While they may be embellishing a little about the difficulty of replacing the equipment at WDOD, that license, without any land or towers, probably wouldn't even net $500. Bahakel almost certainly got more for that land than it would have by selling it as a radio station.
If you were to have bought that license for $500 without any land or towers, there would be no way you could make any money off of it. You'd have to find a suitable area to locate the new towers and buy several acres of land. Even farmland would cost more than you'd think and would be worth more for farming than for an AM station. Plus, you'd have to pay expensive consulting fees to engineers to handle all of the FCC, FAA and other governmental agency issues as well as a study for a ground system. That ground system, by the way, if your hard-earned money proved you could build the station, would cost you an additional fortune.
Once you somehow got that license built and running, what could you run that would bring you any revenue? Good luck getting a significant audience in the money demo! You'd have to rely on an older audience that wouldn't bring in any agency buys (if you could even get a sizeable enough audience to get an agency to look at your numbers), which would mean you'd rely on small businesses that are historic no-pays.
Look, I'm as big of a fan of history and tradition as anyone. Yes, it's sad to see an institution like WDOD 1310 go away simply because the land was worth more than the entire facility. That's, however, what AM is coming to. AM will, in most of our lifetimes, go away. Even the 50 kw AM's aren't getting the audience they used to. That's why we're seeing so many of them get FM simulcasts. Even with rimshot FM signals, those stations are seeing big gains simply because they're getting 25-54 listeners from the FM's who won't listen to AM. We can debate the demise of AM all day. Maybe it was because the FCC took a laissez-faire approach with AM stereo, which meant FM ran away with superior sound quality for music while AM was left begging for manufacturers for some stereo tuner that might not even work with its system. Maybe Docket 80-90 packed the FM band and created too many formats on FM. Maybe AM operators took bad advice from consultants telling them to go ahead and go talk while they still had a valuable and marketable brand since they were going to lose before long anyway or to just sell out because some schmuck who didn't know what he was doing was offering more than what the station would be worth in a year or two. It could be any one of those reasons, a reason I didn't mention, or any combination. Whatever the reason, it is what it is, and we have what we have. With WDOD, the best that can be said is that the heritage of WDOD still lives on at 96.5 FM. In that sense, WDOD has fared better than many heritage stations.
Kent said:StephanieNYC said:Oh bull-hockey. Equipment can be easily replaced/refurbished/upgraded. It's the licence that matters. Someone else could have gotten a chance to get the licence and either moved the facility (or even tried to buy the land).
Umm...you're kidding, right? While they may be embellishing a little about the difficulty of replacing the equipment at WDOD, that license, without any land or towers, probably wouldn't even net $500. Bahakel almost certainly got more for that land than it would have by selling it as a radio station.
If you were to have bought that license for $500 without any land or towers, there would be no way you could make any money off of it. You'd have to find a suitable area to locate the new towers and buy several acres of land. Even farmland would cost more than you'd think and would be worth more for farming than for an AM station. Plus, you'd have to pay expensive consulting fees to engineers to handle all of the FCC, FAA and other governmental agency issues as well as a study for a ground system. That ground system, by the way, if your hard-earned money proved you could build the station, would cost you an additional fortune.
Once you somehow got that license built and running, what could you run that would bring you any revenue? Good luck getting a significant audience in the money demo! You'd have to rely on an older audience that wouldn't bring in any agency buys (if you could even get a sizeable enough audience to get an agency to look at your numbers), which would mean you'd rely on small businesses that are historic no-pays.
Look, I'm as big of a fan of history and tradition as anyone. Yes, it's sad to see an institution like WDOD 1310 go away simply because the land was worth more than the entire facility. That's, however, what AM is coming to. AM will, in most of our lifetimes, go away. Even the 50 kw AM's aren't getting the audience they used to. That's why we're seeing so many of them get FM simulcasts. Even with rimshot FM signals, those stations are seeing big gains simply because they're getting 25-54 listeners from the FM's who won't listen to AM. We can debate the demise of AM all day. Maybe it was because the FCC took a laissez-faire approach with AM stereo, which meant FM ran away with superior sound quality for music while AM was left begging for manufacturers for some stereo tuner that might not even work with its system. Maybe Docket 80-90 packed the FM band and created too many formats on FM. Maybe AM operators took bad advice from consultants telling them to go ahead and go talk while they still had a valuable and marketable brand since they were going to lose before long anyway or to just sell out because some schmuck who didn't know what he was doing was offering more than what the station would be worth in a year or two. It could be any one of those reasons, a reason I didn't mention, or any combination. Whatever the reason, it is what it is, and we have what we have. With WDOD, the best that can be said is that the heritage of WDOD still lives on at 96.5 FM. In that sense, WDOD has fared better than many heritage stations.
radiorob2.0 said:It makes me wonder if someone was to offer Bahakel $500 over the market price of the land would the station still be on the air?
Kent T said:Yes, I think someone will benefit from a signal upgrade. If they act now.
secondchoice said:radiorob2.0 said:It makes me wonder if someone was to offer Bahakel $500 over the market price of the land would the station still be on the air?
NO!!
From Bahakel's view this is a good thing. They save a little on the power bill. If they sold it as a station, someone might have made a go of it, and might take a slice out of the radio ad dollar pie decreasing Bahakel's revenue. If I had the station I would try Comedy like Cumulus did in KC. With a a 10 year note the monthy payment is around $3,600, postive cash flow should be expected.
If the other clusters in Chattanooga start to kill off their AM's too (the excuse will be to save money but really less competion) then you have an anti trust issue.
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Good luck proving that in court!!.