xoanon said:As I understand it, their ATU had been upgraded a few years ago to only 25kw. The coax leading out there might not be rated for 50kw either, and since the path from the xmtr to that tower is parking lot it might be too much trouble to replace or temporarily rig it.
I wonder if their DX50 might balk at running full power into that undoubtedly narrower-bandwidth tower? (not that KFI is running much bandwidth these days!)
Ray22 said:Who cares what KFI coverage is after 9/14 when IBOC nighttime turns KFI's signal until "city grade contour" only. KFI's tower height or location will be of little concern in the new world of "local only" listening. A neutered stick is good enough to service Los Angeles.
A taller KFI tower will just mean they will switch back on their HD. The rest of the country be damn, they don't need to hear a Los Angeles station.
radiorob2.0 said:It seems to me the best option is to put KFI on a Mt Wilson FM signal. The same can be said for any AM that still has ratings and brings in the cash flow. The AM band has so much going against it these days and AM IBOC will only do more harm than good.
How much coverage would KFI lose with a shorter, 500 foot tower? Where else can they put their antenna?
nmoore6676 said:How much coverage would KFI lose with a shorter, 500 foot tower? Where else can they put their antenna?
No place else without going directional or with much reduced radiation efficiency, I'm sure the engineering people have looked at that scenario.
I do not know how long that airport has been there, but KFI has been there since the 30's. Originally they had two 400' towers supporting a horizontal wire antenna of the type abandoned by almost all stations and especially the big 50KW flamethrowers many years before. They were replaced with the 750' vertical antenna in 1948 which was felled by a careless private pilot in December of 2004.
They have applied for a shorter tower 684 total feet above ground level which is actually less than than a half wave but would use a top hat to increase radiation efficiency by putting the higher current peak further up the tower. A 500' tower would only be 0.325 wavelength, more than a quarter wave but nowhere near their desired 1/2 wave. As far as I know, the FCC has signed off on the top hat design, so why the FAA is so concerned, after all of this cooperation is a mystery.
How much would buy the Fullerton Airport? Maybe Clear channel needs to ask.
As I understand it, the plane hit one of the guys.
nmoore6676 said:As I understand it, the plane hit one of the guys.
I understood that the highest guys were at around 650' so the last 100' or so was above that and the plane was said to have struck about ten feet down from the top. I doubt that a free standing tower would be feasible in that the area around the tower base has been developed into warehouses. A guyed tower has the advantage that in event of a complete failure the wires tend to pull the structure down and it collapses more or less on itself as the KFI tower did. Freestanding towers can fall over and farther away from the base.
Any structure that projects hundreds of feet into the air could present a hazard to unskilled amateur pilots who are not paying attention. To make it safe under those circumstances would create an unacceptable signal level which could not meet the FCC requirements for a station of KFI's class. In essence they would be surrendering their privilege which then could allow for other stations on adjacent channels (or co-channel stations) to apply for power increases or reduce their directional protection to KFI.
In this day of IBOC and all of the gadgets generating interference a station needs every millivolt of field strength to reach listeners on AM. It's not anymore about skywave and fringe reception it's all about getting over the background noise in the primary coverage area.
I suppose this situation would be what a Kinstar antenna was designed for, a low profile antenna system.
dbdigital said:nmoore6676 said:I suppose this situation would be what a Kinstar antenna was designed for, a low profile antenna system.
If you are referring to a folded unipole, those are designed to put a tower at ground potential so other antennae can be mounted ont he AM radiator, or to compensate for lousy ground systems.
The other design, consiting of masts in a hexagonal pattern surrounding a central mast, is low profile, but requires, as you say, a lot of land to string the horizontal portion of the antenna. KFI has no open land to use for this.
But the big issue is that the former 1A clears are required to have a half-wave tower or one that has the true electrical characteristics of a 180 radiator... thus the top loading.
Amazing how one accident can open up such a can of worms. And it highlights too the need for some new, innovative ideas in antenna design if AM is going to remain viable in urban areas.
Unfortunately, we are dealing with the laws of physics and a wavelength that is nearly 500 meters. To get radiation efficiency, the antenna has to behave as if it were about 250 meters "high." Otherwise, as has been said, KFI runs the risk of being downgraded... which might benefit their co-channel Atlanta station!
nmoore6676 said:KFI used to be in the boonies as well and I think they were once among the stations seeking half million watt authorization.