Scott Fybush said:
Daytimers considerably predate WWII. I believe they can be traced back to the General Order 40 realignment of the radio dial in November 1928, at a minimum. I've been studying General Order 40 in some depth of late, and I can point to at least one daytimer it created: WKEN in Buffalo had been on 1470 prior to General Order 40, and would have been forced to share the frequency with WKBW (which had been on 1380), but instead WKEN petitioned the Commerce Department for a different assignment and became a daytimer on 1040.
I've spent some time tonight combing through the Radio Service Bulletins on the FCC website. (
http://www.fcc.gov/mb/audio/decdoc/radio_service_bulletins.html)
The definition of a "daytimer" is established in General Order #41, issued on Sept. 4th, 1928. It appears the changes established in General Orders #40 and 41 (among others) went into effect on Nov. 11, 1928. I would suggest this date is the birth of the daytimer, from the regulatory standpoint.
I have not seen evidence that any stations were limited by their licenses to daytime-only operation before that date. With the possible exception of stations involved in a time-sharing agreement that didn't allow for nighttime hours.
_________________________________________________
Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:
All FM frequencies seem to have equal opportunity to sound good or sound bad.
I would disagree with the premise that all FM frequencies are created equal, in terms of the coverage of the stations there...
As I know some of you are aware, until Docket 80-90 went into effect, twenty commercial FM channels were reserved for use ONLY by Class A stations. The remaining commercial channels were ONLY available for stations that were *not* Class A. While 80-90 has been with us for more than 25 years now, its effects linger.
A quick survey shows that 92.1, one of the pre-80-90 reserved channels, today contains 129 license records in CDBS. Of these, 96 are for Class A stations.
92.3 was NOT reserved pre-80-90. It contains 99 license records. (and thus is roughly 30% less crowded than 92.1...) Of those 99, only 26 are for Class A stations.
You are more likely to find a more powerful station on 92.3 than on 92.1.
_________________________________________________
As a
general rule, lower regional frequencies do better. (of course, you can say that for *all* AM frequencies, but IMHO the difference is more obvious among the regional channels)
That said, I know as a Milwaukee native my opinion of the value of 620KHz is far better than that of a New Yorker!