F
Foobar
Guest
Re: Coverage
> RPO seems to have the coverage one would expect from an
> LPFM.
>
I have received WINF clear down near Mt. Sterling in Pickaway county on several different occasions (not likely due to prop enhancement). This "59 Watt" signal has to travel from Delaware to Columbus, cross the entire metro, then make it down to Pickaway County and be received clearly on a generic car radio with a rated sensitivity of about 2uV. Considering that some of the local Class A's (like TEDand WODB) don't do a whole lot better than that down there....WINF aint runnin no 59 Watts!
They have a 4-bay antenna side mounted on the old FM tower behind the WDLR studio. This antenna appears to be up about 100-120 feet or so above ground. Like previous posters have stated 59W ERP is 59W ERP no matter what ratio of antenna gain to tranny TPO is used to obtain it. Maybe their engineer misread the license document and is running an erp of 590 Watts {;>)
> RPO seems to have the coverage one would expect from an
> LPFM.
>
I have received WINF clear down near Mt. Sterling in Pickaway county on several different occasions (not likely due to prop enhancement). This "59 Watt" signal has to travel from Delaware to Columbus, cross the entire metro, then make it down to Pickaway County and be received clearly on a generic car radio with a rated sensitivity of about 2uV. Considering that some of the local Class A's (like TEDand WODB) don't do a whole lot better than that down there....WINF aint runnin no 59 Watts!
They have a 4-bay antenna side mounted on the old FM tower behind the WDLR studio. This antenna appears to be up about 100-120 feet or so above ground. Like previous posters have stated 59W ERP is 59W ERP no matter what ratio of antenna gain to tranny TPO is used to obtain it. Maybe their engineer misread the license document and is running an erp of 590 Watts {;>)