This afternoon I heard faint talking on 88.9 underneath the splatter from local 89.1 KSTX on my car radio. At first I thought it was bleed from elsewhere, but later KSTX went silent, although its carrier was still on. The faint audio then became copyable, and I heard news and local weather. The station IDed itself as "Owl Radio - Reading for those who cannot see" shortly before KSTX's audio/splatter resumed.
I did a search and learned that it's a local Radio Reading Service (RRS) station, which reads newspapers, magazines, etc. for people with vision disabilities. This particular station is on the 67 kHz subcarrier of KSTX. I'd never heard of RRS stations before.
The Owl Radio website says that you need a special RRS radio to receive the broadcasts. How common is it to receive these stations on a regular radio? My car radio is an Accord stock non-HD radio, and KSTX is about 8 miles from the reception point.
I did a search and learned that it's a local Radio Reading Service (RRS) station, which reads newspapers, magazines, etc. for people with vision disabilities. This particular station is on the 67 kHz subcarrier of KSTX. I'd never heard of RRS stations before.
The Owl Radio website says that you need a special RRS radio to receive the broadcasts. How common is it to receive these stations on a regular radio? My car radio is an Accord stock non-HD radio, and KSTX is about 8 miles from the reception point.