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K225DC 92.9 (KGTK?) contact help appreciated.

AM 680 is not dead yet! The facility has just applied to carry to the "KUTI" callsign. Could contributors explain the significance of these call letters?

The call letters were once on Yakima and Selah stations, the last being 1460 (ex-KMWX).
 
A look at the 2.0 mV/m daytime coverage shows soon-KUTI to be very small at its 250-watts. So small, in fact the K266BM contour spills outside. Only by using the alternate (but legal) 40 km AM radius rule does K266BM's contour become fill-in compliant. Smart engineering indeed! The 101.1 coverage is what makes KUTI useful.
 
AM 680 is not dead yet! The facility has just applied to carry to the "KUTI" callsign. Could contributors explain the significance of these call letters?

The call letters were once on Yakima and Selah stations, the last being 1460 (ex-KMWX).
The first thing that came to mind was 'Urinary Tract Infection', Lol. I suspect the folks behind NWSPRR have plans for it. The value is having the 101.1 translator attached to 680, All indications are that 106.5 will be the only translator for KBRD 920.
 
The first thing that came to mind was 'Urinary Tract Infection', Lol. I suspect the folks behind NWSPRR have plans for it. The value is having the 101.1 translator attached to 680, All indications are that 106.5 will be the only translator for KBRD 920.

Thats what i said a few comments ago. betting the NWSPRR had some plans for 680.. somehow. Probably to do with some of their translator signals
 
KUTI used to be "Cutie Country", a popular AM country station in the 1970s-1980s. Was on 980khz and then went to 1460 with classic country. Then 1460 went to ESPN. Now gone, RIP.
They originally started out as KIMA-AM, just like the CBS station on channel 29.
 
A DXer in NW Oregon on the now-recovered pdxradio.com board has posted hearing KVNW with a much stronger signal. Perhaps it's now at 4 kw ERP in C3 status.
They are stronger, but still does not lock in RDS on the Northern Oregon Coast. I would guess they are 4 KW, as in the same ball park with 104.3 KMNT in signal, maybe a hair better. I still get KZZU Spokane regularly though, as well as KISM.
 
NWR&RPS has filed nother mod for their Capitol Peak translator, formerly on 92.9 but now on 106.5. K293DE (10 watts) is the one that retransmits KGHO-LP via K224DR.

The antenna pattern seems really bizarre for being a Bext LogR. 40 dB down over a 140-degree span seems unreasonable. There is no technical report with the latest submission.
 
The FCC on 7/18 granted NWR&RPS's license-to-cover paperwork for K225DI in Tacoma. Yes, 92.9 . The paperwork says they use three Scala CLFM's log-periodic antennas in some strange arrangement. The "array" is on a tall pole in a well-forested neighborhood. The RADCEN is 118' (36M) and the total pole height is 141' . Power output is 60 watts ERP Per the paperwork this is a relay of KGHO-LP via translators.

Next time I am in Tacoma I will have to find it and share some pictures with you readers. (I can't find the tower on Google Earth.)
 
The FCC on 7/18 granted NWR&RPS's license-to-cover paperwork for K225DI in Tacoma. Yes, 92.9 . The paperwork says they use three Scala CLFM's log-periodic antennas in some strange arrangement. The "array" is on a tall pole in a well-forested neighborhood. The RADCEN is 118' (36M) and the total pole height is 141' . Power output is 60 watts ERP Per the paperwork this is a relay of KGHO-LP via translators.

Next time I am in Tacoma I will have to find it and share some pictures with you readers. (I can't find the tower on Google Earth.)
It’s hard for me to imagine a world where that setup works very well. Maybe it will get out decently, but I’m skeptical.

I’ve said this before but I’ll reiterate: it’s a shame that the Rock and Roll Preservation Society goes to these great lengths to keep their translators on the air, yet fail to do it in a way that makes logical sense. It’s a shame, because I genuinely like what they’re trying to do (and would probably listen if it were more accessible).

If I were them, I wouldn’t waste any more money on any of this equipment, LPs, or licenses, and would just try to focus on maintaining one station properly.
 
Given the limited spectrum available in the market, there's a convoluted logic to going to great lengths to keep the translators. Perhaps their perspective is that it's important to hold onto something to even stand the chance of improving it.
 
Given the limited spectrum available in the market, there's a convoluted logic to going to great lengths to keep the translators. Perhaps their perspective is that it's important to hold onto something to even stand the chance of improving it.
For how much they’ve spent on legal fees, translators, and other equipment, they could have potentially purchased a smaller (keyword) commercial FM for their programming. If they had something in the south sound that didn’t have the power of a flea, I’d definitely check it out.
 
The FCC on 7/18 granted NWR&RPS's license-to-cover paperwork for K225DI in Tacoma. Yes, 92.9 . The paperwork says they use three Scala CLFM's log-periodic antennas in some strange arrangement. The "array" is on a tall pole in a well-forested neighborhood. The RADCEN is 118' (36M) and the total pole height is 141' . Power output is 60 watts ERP Per the paperwork this is a relay of KGHO-LP via translators.

Next time I am in Tacoma I will have to find it and share some pictures with you readers. (I can't find the tower on Google Earth.)

The K225DI signal sounds awful as expected. Completely distorted. Perhaps they're "up-a-tree"?

Indeed they are so.

The "pole" filed with the FCC is actually a nice Douglas FIr located in the backyard of 1411 S Cushman in Tacoma. Trees work for low-power non-directionals but definitely not for complex patterns. One has to look closely as the "array elements" are buried within the tree's branches. I did not see any receive signal antenna so it could be just a crummy dipole inside the residence. Listen for yourself next time you're in Tacoma.

Meanwhile, the Capitol Peak K293DE signal is actually quite nice audio-wise. For 10 watts ERP the coverage the signal really gets out. I can hear it down to the Pikes Hill exit on I-5. That's mile marker 63 - the Winlock exit. This means both Olympia AND Centralia-Chehalis get full coverage. Once the new filed coverage gets activated then Centralia-Chehalis should drop out.


K225DI_Douglas_Fir.jpgK225DI_Multiarray.jpg20250812_K225DI_Tacoma.jpg
 
On sunny summer days KISM comes in very clearly and powerfully into Tacoma on that frequncy. Not shocked you are getting distortion.

And those are 10 very magical watts if you are getting K293DE that far south. Super magical.
 
I heard KISM Bellingham in Gresham OR, Labor Day weekend in 2012. The Tr that I used to get from Snohomish County to KINK, KUFO, KWJJ, was definitely a two-way street.
Antenna...up a pole and up in a tree. Isn't that the same way for KQES-LP Bellevue?
 


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