"Since WCBS has installed their rebuilt exciter I will say that their sidebands are probably the most narrow of all the AM IBOC's I've heard.
Bravo to WCBS! Obviously they have done some seriously good engineering work (although I still can't pick up their HD signal on my BA Receptors in midtown Manhattan)."
I would be surprised if you could pick up WCBS 's analog signal in Manhattan. It has nothing to due with the IBOC technology. It's because the level of RF which WCBS puts into Manhattan is miniscule due to poor ground conductivity and the number of skyscrapers between High Island in the Bronx and your location in the city. You can't hear them in the 60's or 70's on the West Side Highway either. How many times must this be repeated? Your B.A. is defective, that's already been established. I have posted demos of all of these stations from my suburban location and they not only come in well on my Recepetor but on my HDT-1 as well. You even said that you were impressed with the Sangean demo. I've even used my receptor inside a shielded building on the west side of manhattan and while i couldn't hear WCBS, WOR, WNYC and WADO IBOC were loud and clear. There was no WABC IBOC at the time of my test.
"Again, I know what WRKL is looking for. First they are trying to serve an audience far outside the coverage area of their primary signal.
Blame or discredit the victim. Good tactic!"
Victim? Hardly a victim. WRKL has alledged interference. They haven't proven a thing yet, have they? Also, I happen to have specific inside information about that facility, having worked there, which I doubt you and others are privy to.
"That and the fact that they have not been granted a renewal and now with a 50 KW station which they fear will cut down on their coverage, legal or otherwise will lower the value of the station.
They fear will cut down on their coverage? They don't fear it. They are obviously already experiencing it, otherwise, why would they have filed this action? Generally, actions are not filed on fear of damage alone. Usually, a damage needs to have already occurred. Oh yes, and the value of their station has already been lowered by the decreased coverage they are experiencing. They don't need to fear that. It is already a reality and the administrative agency which oversees these matters have already legalized it. Isn't that superb?"
They also have other real problems. First; because the commission hasn't renewed their license which they applied for in 2006. What that means is that while they can still broadcast on 910 KHZ, they can not sell their facility. AM property values are dropping due to audience numbers dwindling. I don't live in Brooklyn so I can't at this point do any testing. I do travel to Orange county, into Monroe on occasion and WRKL comes in as well as it ever did. Same goes for my trip into Manhattans west side. You choose to believe that WRKL is the poor plaintiff in this case without any proof other than choosing to take the side of whoever is against and IBOC staton. For someone who obviously has little inside information in this case, that's very even handed of you.
"They bought WRKL so that they could tell advertisers that they were getting a signal into NYC, even if NYC is beyond WRKL's protected coverage area.
Any idiot, including me, can see that NYC is not even close to WRKL's protected coverage area. Last I checked, I didn't think WRKL was trying to sell any advertising time to NYC advertisers, although I could be mistaken."
Well it really shows what you know about this situation. You are mistaken. They bought WRKL to get a NY pressence. Their listeners are in central Jersey, around the Elizabeth area and in Brooklyn. They are already on record of having problems with interference from WPAT (930). I was told the reason they bought WRKL was that it was what they could afford and that they coundn't afford to purchase a better NY signal.
"I've already provided an audio demonstation showing that WRKL receives within it's primary protected contour, no interference from WCBS, but hey, anyone can sue anyone for anything. The key will be, can they prove it.
"If the key will be, can they prove it, then the question is, do you think they would go to the trouble of filing this action if they couldn't?"
Law suits have been brought for many reasons. Maybe they hope for a payoff from deep pocketed CBS or maybe they've been sold a line of B.S. and like their purchase of WRKL they bought this hook, line and sinker. I'll have to find out who provided them with the info they will base their lawsuit on. On another note concerning WRKL's commitment to serving Rockland County. Check out the official Rockland county web site (
http://www.co.rockland.ny.us/) and look for the link to WRKL (they have them for WRCR and the low power county run 1640 on the left side of the page). There is no link to WRKL because they don't serve Rockland County, which is a shame because they are the only local signal that covers the entire county. They are used basically to rebroadcast WNVR and also act as a remote studio for WNVR. WLIM used to simulcast the WRKL feed as well with no local programing originating from that site. The three stations were tied together via ISDN line. Now WLIM is no longer part of this network. There aren't enough listeners in Rockland county to support that radio station. They depend on a fringe out of area audience to make a go of it. Without going into too much detail I happen to know that every week things such as audio level had been checked and readjusted to keep them within spec and most every week knobs had been turned, after correction had been made to put out more audio so that their signal could be heard in those fringe areas outside of their protected contour a little better. Even though they run 24 hours a day I have been told by a person in a managment position at the station that they only cared about their daytime signal because they knew after sundown they couldn't be heard in the areas they wanted to reach.