a translator in CT at one time was reportedly in a tree ages ago
With Tacoma being located on a bit of a land peninsula (with open Puget Sound to the north of it), KISM is definitely stronger than most coverage maps would indicate. Even the trusty Longely Rice coverage maps don’t really get the coverage right. When add in Mount Constitution and all of the open Puget Sound between the transmitter and Tacoma, it’s a recipe for disaster.The 92.9 Tacoma audio has improved. Perhaps someone from NWRRPS has moved the folded dipole "T" antenna behind the stereo set to get things working. (They musy be readinh this thread.)
The Douglas Fir antenna is not the "root" (pun intended) of the problem. Instead, KISM 92.9 throws a monster signal southward from Mt Constitution on Orcas. Throw in a little summertime tropoducting and things go bad real fast.
I was in Tacoma today. The NWR&RPS translator on 92.9 remains a sonic mess. The Doug Fir antenna does not help either.. They should just feed the translator off the Internet and be done with it!
If they really are running 4kw, then they've got 95.1 beat easily on power output. Live 95 is a great hyper-local radio station for Lewis County, but they don't get out very far (unfortunately).I was driving through Lewis County today and we landed on 92.9. It's still simulcasting KITI, but outside of the required legal at the top of the hour, there's no promotion of it at all. I wonder what's going on with this? To me, if they really had solid plans for this signal, they would have executed them by now. Instead, it's AM 1420 and 100.5 with no mention of the 92.9 that is very easily as good of a signal as either their 95.1 or the 104.3 in the area.
This thread remains as somewhat of a dumping ground for all things NWR&RPS in the Puget Sound . Therefore, I add the following note;
The FCC has approved the K293DE (106.5) Capitol Peak license to cover (L2C) filing. The signal is 10 watts ERP using two Bext Log-R (log periodic) antennas stacked at 0.78 wavelength separation. The boresight is 35 degrees (thus NNE). Supposedly there is a 40 dB null centered at 180 degrees (S). This relays KGHO-LP via K224DR.
(1) NWRRPS continues to run a bogus antenna pattern from Capitol Peak 106.5 . It's like they're using the old pattern for what was the 92.9 translator. I can easily hear 106.5 in Chehalis - heck even down to the Vader exit and beyond. (2) Their 92.9 Tacoma repeater still has crummy, hissy audio - they should acquire a nice receive antenna and a serious FM receiver to ingest the 106.5 Olympia signal. A used Magnum-Dynalab FT-101A might be all that is needed on the receiver side.