Lopaka said:In addition to 1420, 1450 and 540 before 760, I think KFMB had a brief stint on 550. Not many stations have had more frequencies than call letters. A trivia contest might be to find the station that has had the most frequencies, KFMB would be a good entrant.
600kogo said:Not quite everything was on 833.3 but it was because radio was experimental.
600kogo said:That makes zero sense 160-340 kilohertz is not the broadcast band! or near it !
radio-darn said:FYI: here are actually three AM broadcasting bands. The one we used in the USA is the mediumwave band. In some parts of the world the longwave band between 148.5 and 283.5 kHz is used for AM broadcasting, and of course, there's the shortwave band.
600kogo said:David the early days that I am refering to were from about 1919-1927. There were no shortwave bands on a commercially available receiver for the home there was simply broadcast. Most of them had multiple tuning stages (especially since they wre tuned radio frequency receivers not superhetrodyne). But they could only tune in the one band! And shortwave or longwave of anysort at that point was either amateur or federal. And the amateur/ham did not come about until the mid 20's. In 1922 when KFBC was licensed most of the amateurs were playing on the broadcast band. Go take a look at the Atwater kents, Zenith's. RCA's, Majestic's, Crosley's, Philco's, Jackson Bell's, Scott's, and other brands from 1919-1927 and see how many bands there were. Some of the first receivers to be able to change bands were the early Scott Allwave's (not the Allwave 23's), and to do so you had to change the coils, which you got a box of coils. Radios with shortwave recevers did not come on the scene until after late 1928.
sdwulfdawg said:@Chris - Are you sure that Rick Roberts is now broadcasting out of San Diego? I was listening to his show on Friday and it was ROCKY. Lots of overlong musicbeds, missed news cues, etc.
600kogo said:To respond to the comment that KFMB is not the legacy station that it was?? None of the great stations across the country are anything close to what they formerly were, whether programming wise, rating wise, or sales wise!! It's not just a problem for KFMB, but for what they are they are not bad. Of course in San Diego KOGO is still king, which they took from KSDO.
Heres a list of stations that once were something and now are dogs!
KCBQ
KDEO
KSDO
KSON-AM
KOWN/KFSD
KPRZ
XETRA-AM
All of these stations were WAYYY better programmed and cared about at one point but their owners just dont care! All of them have less than a .7 share. KFMB at least 12 + has a 2.2