Now that Hector and his now EX-Wife are business partners, change is coming!La Calle is Back on FM on 104.5 FM.
Ahhhhh...got ya!Now that Hector and his now EX-Wife are business partners, change is coming!
Now that Hector and his now EX-Wife are business partners, change is coming!
Now that Hector and his ex-wife are now "Business Enemies" would be more accurate. Sara Guevara has a new name, "Sara Franco," which we may see in the future.
Business partners? I figured they would be competitors now.
As of midday today the iHopeRadio website is still there, but it appears it hasn't been manually updated in a couple of months. There were no recent postings on their Facebook page when I checked last night. I still see info about the "Universal Living Faith Network" tv channel that is supposedly available on DirecTV and some of the minor cable/broadband providers in the area, but not Comcast.
If indeed gone, iHopeRadio lasted only 14 months on 104.5, which is shorter than Kiss-FM (~18 months) and La Mejor (two years.) This incarnation of La Calle sounds a bit different from the original (on 92.5) which included more Tropical.
Meanwhile, La Caliente is now blasting in on 105.3 at my Cy-Fair location, the signal once again obliterating KTWL. Supposedly the newest downtown signal for K287BQ is directional with heavy suppression towards KTWL, but that isn't happening. Sounds the same as the previous downtown signal. The more recent site in Stafford was fringe at my location, with KTWL dominating. As LPFM KJFI 102.5 is also running La Caliente, I would assume that it would act as filler coverage for the 105.3 transmitter, were K287BQ operating within licensed parameters.
The KJFI signal has to be broadcasting way above their allotted wattage as they are destroying KMAZ 102.5's signal inside the loop. It used to be heard fairly clear in the river oaks, heights and Washington corridor but it now has heavy interference. Even in certain areas downtown,the signal is degraded. Wonder how long they will let it stand before sending in a complaint to the FCC.
Now Rumba is on both 92.5 and 104.5. And the DJ just said we’re moving to 104.5.
The KMAZ and KJFI transmitters are a little over 15 miles from each other, so they barely meet the minimum spacing requirement for LPFMs. I have driven the KJFI signal along 290, and found that it reaches the 34th Street intersection, then there is a clash of the two stations along the West Loop, then KMAZ dominates inside the Loop. But there are some dead spots for KMAZ that allow KJFI to sneak through. I have even heard a couple of dead spots downtown, right underneath the KMAZ transmitter.
KMAZ is only one watt, so despite the 1000' height its very poor field strength leaves it vulnerable to being overridden by other stations. I have driven along Studemont and Montrose in clear close-by view of the downtown buildings while KMAZ was being buried underneath KMKS during heavy tropo conditions.
KJFI is on a 500' tower with four watts, so not much field strength there either, but few tall structures in the way.
Before KJFI and K273AL went on the air I could hear KMAZ with a listenable signal all the way out to the Beltway along 290, and even spotty reception along FM1960 in NW Harris County.
From RadioInsight's recent 5/1 sales report:
"As part of a divorce settlement between Hector and Sara Guevara, Hector’s Centro Cristiano de Vida Eterna will transfer 91.5 K218EJ and 105.3 K287BQ Houston to Sara’s Hope Franco Organization Incorporation."
The KMAZ and KJFI transmitters are a little over 15 miles from each other, so they barely meet the minimum spacing requirement for LPFMs. I have driven the KJFI signal along 290, and found that it reaches the 34th Street intersection, then there is a clash of the two stations along the West Loop, then KMAZ dominates inside the Loop. But there are some dead spots for KMAZ that allow KJFI to sneak through. I have even heard a couple of dead spots downtown, right underneath the KMAZ transmitter.
KMAZ is only one watt, so despite the 1000' height its very poor field strength leaves it vulnerable to being overridden by other stations. I have driven along Studemont and Montrose in clear close-by view of the downtown buildings while KMAZ was being buried underneath KMKS during heavy tropo conditions.
KJFI is on a 500' tower with four watts, so not much field strength there either, but few tall structures in the way.
Before KJFI and K273AL went on the air I could hear KMAZ with a listenable signal all the way out to the Beltway along 290, and even spotty reception along FM1960 in NW Harris County.