The KOCD calls where for Oklahoma Compact Disc, as in when they were Smooth Jazz. The original station was in Wilburton indeed when it was part of the big Mac cluster, programmed by the college. That all ended when it was moved to it's current tower site co-located on the 95.1 KQCV-FM Bott tower "The station was owned by Senator LeBlance out of Harshorne, tranny and stick were in Okemah and they were studioing out of, can't remeber the name of the town, but it was on I-40 just east of OKC."
Seminole is the town you're looking for. Yes. The jocks, from the beginning under BA's Smooth Jazz via the bird to the radio-in-a-box "Oklahoma's CD 103.7" days all came from elsewhere via the internet. The "Oklahoma's 103.7" version was programmed by Phil Hall of former ABC Radio Network fame.
"I think most of the airstaff was voicetracking from home studios."
Correct.
"Wasn't KOCD originally licensed to Wilburton or somewhere? And then moved to rim-shot OKC and Tulsa? After moving, they were Smooth Jazz and then moved to a more straight-ahead AC catering to Tulsa (maybe in an attempt to get KBEZ's listeners after they became "Bob FM"). The music wasn't bad, but the talent was not so good. Mainly because everyone sounded horribly voicetracked." The automation performed less that stellar in the beginning which contributed to some the lack of polish at first, which I', sure didn't help the cause any. "They were also Tulsa's home to Broken Arrow football (oddly enough) and were on the Radio Oklahoma Network using KOTV updates (even though they are geographically much closer to OKC)." Yes. I'm guessing towards the end that BA football was a highlight on any ratings the station had. BA did a great job for the year they were on the station. There is a ridge that is around the Shawnee area that prevents the 103.7 signal from really reaching OKC. Appearently the engineering consultant either missed this or choose to not really make it too appearent to the owner. The station was turned on with the idea it would serve OKC but it was fairly quickly determined that topography said otherwise. More of Tulsa is served by a listenable signal by the station. I don't have really good Longly-Rice predictors, but what I can project from the free CRC site pretty much shows that doubling the height of the tower would help a lot. The costs would be very high and it still would, however, be a wanna-be signal compared to the other FMs in-town. What I wonder at this point is if EMF will someday improve their installation of the antenna to where it will favor Tulsa even more since they already have 88.9 in OKC doing a great job for that area. Since placement of the antenna was hung with the intent that it would serve OKC, I question if there's more push that could be given to the Tulsa market with simply re-hanging the antenna, maybe on a pole at a certain distance from the tower, etc. There's a lot that can be done with "Omni" antenna systems that still is legal.