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KOY - The New Coyote

I must say I was quite surprised at KOY's coverage. I was in "The Valley" recently and listened from Goodyear, all the way up Rt 87 to nearly Sunflower. A DARN decent signal for a Class IV. Not a bad music mix (oldies) I did notice that there seemed to be some issues with skips in songs, at least for a while. Then it seemed to clear up, wonder if someone started to monitor the station.

One area of interferrance seems to be in the Sky Harbor cell phone lot, everytime the board changes KOY's signal drops.
 
Bill Drake said:
That being said, 1230 has one of the best coverage areas of any station in its class. I can hear it all the way to Anthem at night which isn't too shabby for 1kw.....

KSUN 14~Hundred has a tall stick as well that gets out pretty good in spite of their higher frequency. Of course we're all anxious to hear what 52 watts sounds like on the new Nautel that's on its way to Lumberyard 14~Forty. While catfish (small C) carps ;) about a non-existent ground system, there are plenty of metal sheds and junk cars around the base of 14~Forty to compensate for a lack of copper in the ground!
 
KSUN doesn't impress me as much as KRIZ; err KO-WHY. I'm up near 7th & U Hills and KSUN is barely a flicker at night. Where is their tower in relation to 1230? There's also a 1400 in Tucson which makes for interesting listening if you travel in that direction.
 
Bill Drake said:
KSUN doesn't impress me as much as KRIZ; err KO-WHY. I'm up near 7th & U Hills and KSUN is barely a flicker at night. Where is their tower in relation to 1230?

Why, the KSUN stick is just about four blocks from the original KayOhWhy 50~Five Phoenix site: http://maps.google.com/maps?f=q&hl=en&q=33.38972,+-111.99778+(KSUN-AM)&om=1 Size matters...when you're a Class IV C :p
 
guess there's a lot involved in getting out a decent signal. good ground, tower, location, location, location. of course 1230 was a competitive station for years .............. 1400 is a puppy fart in the breeze..... never been anything. I seem to recall when KRIZ was sold by Doubleday to the Amerikan Taliban, it was listed as the highest grossing class iv in the nation. how times have changed.....
 
Bill Drake said:
I seem to recall when KRIZ was sold by Doubleday to the Amerikan Taliban, it was listed as the highest grossing class iv in the nation.

Could have had much more to do with the station's content than the signal strength/quality.
 
Bill Drake said:
.....1400 is a puppy fart in the breeze..... never been anything.

but it was co-owned by Dick Van Dyke. And Ppppreston Westmoreland was one of the Boss jocks there, Mr. Yarbrough!
 
landtuna said:
Could have had much more to do with the station's content than the signal strength/quality.

We'd have to call in the Old Gringo for some color commentary on the sale of KRIZ to Family Life Radio. The Buckeye Boyz find it hard to believe FLR purchased 12~Thirty for big bucks in hopes of keeping the Top 40 audience. There are quite a few instances of Ancient Modulation stations selling at ridiculous prices in the Seventies, only to see their values go down faster than a streetwalker on EVB :eek:
 
landtuna said:
Bill Drake said:
I seem to recall when KRIZ was sold by Doubleday to the Amerikan Taliban, it was listed as the highest grossing class iv in the nation.

Could have had much more to do with the station's content than the signal strength/quality.

Duh! Ya think maybe? ;D
 
Dr. Akbar said:
landtuna said:
Could have had much more to do with the station's content than the signal strength/quality.

We'd have to call in the Old Gringo for some color commentary on the sale of KRIZ to Family Life Radio. The Buckeye Boyz find it hard to believe FLR purchased 12~Thirty for big bucks in hopes of keeping the Top 40 audience. There are quite a few instances of Ancient Modulation stations selling at ridiculous prices in the Seventies, only to see their values go down faster than a streetwalker on EVB :eek:

As I seem to recall.... Doubleday wanted to buy a station somewhere else - and that being the good ol' days when the ownership limit was capped at SEVEN - gawd that seems but a faint memory - as does having real people in real studios with time checks and local weather and... Oh, excuse me.... Anyway, Doubleday dumped the smallest <coverage area> station they had. Which was KRIZ.

Now Eddddddduardo can come in and rewrite history with his unique South of the Border flavor.
 
Dr. Akbar said:
Bill Drake said:
.....1400 is a puppy fart in the breeze..... never been anything.

but it was co-owned by Dick Van Dyke. And Ppppreston Westmoreland was one of the Boss jocks there, Mr. Yarbrough!

I find it difficult to believe that Presty could wind a Rolex, let alone handle the Drake format.

And Dr. Akbar, NEVER use my real name in public or I'll have your Regent University Diploma revoked! ;D
 
Dr. Akbar said:
There are quite a few instances of Ancient Modulation stations selling at ridiculous prices in the Seventies, only to see their values go down faster than a streetwalker on EVB :eek:

But WAIT! Isn't EVB the sensational new backdrop for 12 Noooz?

Oh.....wait.....<nevermind>.
 
Bill Drake said:
I find it difficult to believe that Presty could wind a Rolex, let alone handle the Drake format.

And Dr. Akbar, NEVER use my real name in public or I'll have your Regent University Diploma revoked! ;D

The Nurse and I heard Ppprestonian on the Heywood tribute Lovable Jaybird did a while back and he sounded quite good. That PMD pendulm has swung in the opposite direction with Dumber and Dumbest rolling 3-7, 3-7, 3-7 on KT'R.

Sorry 'bout the name thing Mr Y Drake. What happens in Buckeye, stays in Buckeye is our policy!
 
Bill Drake said:
As I seem to recall.... Doubleday wanted to buy a station somewhere else - and that being the good ol' days when the ownership limit was capped at SEVEN - gawd that seems but a faint memory - as does having real people in real studios with time checks and local weather and... Oh, excuse me.... Anyway, Doubleday dumped the smallest <coverage area> station they had. Which was KRIZ.

I always heard the story told that Doubleday dumped KRIZ when it decided to get out of the radio business completely, but that's not the part of the story that will make you cry.

The cash that changed hands was a mere pittance - a fraction of the station's value. The difference between the cash and the value of the station was considered a charitable contribution, which Doubleday took as a tax write-off. That tax loophole has since been closed. But that's why they sought out somebody like FLR.
 
johndavis said:
I always heard the story told that Doubleday dumped KRIZ when it decided to get out of the radio business completely, but that's not the part of the story that will make you cry.

The cash that changed hands was a mere pittance - a fraction of the station's value. The difference between the cash and the value of the station was considered a charitable contribution, which Doubleday took as a tax write-off. That tax loophole has since been closed. But that's why they sought out somebody like FLR.

Nurse Jeff and I recall Doubleday wanted into larger markets when Gary Stevens took over and Phoenix at that time was small potatoes. The tax write off angle makes a lot of sense as FLR couldn't afford to pay market value for KRIZ knowing the format would not be retained. Gary Stevens came up through programming and became head of Doubleday Radio. He's also been involved in station brokerage and is currently on the board of Saga Communications.
 
Bill Drake said:
As I seem to recall.... Doubleday wanted to buy a station somewhere else - and that being the good ol' days when the ownership limit was capped at SEVEN - gawd that seems but a faint memory - as does having real people in real studios with time checks and local weather and... Oh, excuse me.... Anyway, Doubleday dumped the smallest <coverage area> station they had. Which was KRIZ.

Now Eddddddduardo can come in and rewrite history with his unique South of the Border flavor.

The sale was for $700,000 and listed on May 1, 1978.

http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-IDX/78-OCR/1978-05-01-BC-0051.pdf#search="kriz"

At the time, Doubleday only owned 4 other AMs so they did not need to sell anything to add new properties.

Phoenix was, though, one of only two markets where Doubleday did not have an FM, and Gary Stevens proceeded to push the FM side, including the acquisition of what would become WAPP.

Probably a factor was the issue that Phoenix at the time was only about 1.3 million in population, ranked, IIRC, below San Juan in SRDS. Bad AM signal, smaller market, desire to move to FM properties.
 
johndavis said:
I always heard the story told that Doubleday dumped KRIZ when it decided to get out of the radio business completely, but that's not the part of the story that will make you cry.

No, Gary Stevens took Doubleday to great heights using FMs... ones they had, like KDWB... and acquisitions like WAPP... following his appointment as head of the company.

The cash that changed hands was a mere pittance - a fraction of the station's value. The difference between the cash and the value of the station was considered a charitable contribution, which Doubleday took as a tax write-off. That tax loophole has since been closed. But that's why they sought out somebody like FLR.

The price, $700 k, for a class IV, was not out of a reasonable valuation back then. It's close to what Larry Mazursky paid Lotus for KRUX a couple of years later and in line with what Mazursky paid for his FM in '83.
 
Bill Drake said:
I seem to recall when KRIZ was sold by Doubleday to the Amerikan Taliban, it was listed as the highest grossing class iv in the nation. how times have changed.....

That title was held among WVON 1450 in Chicago, WJMO 1490 in Cleveland, WOL 1450 in DC, WJLB 1400 in Detroit and KGFJ 1230 in LA in the 70's. 1340, WHAT in Philly and the 1490 in St. Louis were close contenders, too, as was WMBM in Miami and still, KNUZ 1230 in Houston.

By the time KRIZ was sold, it was waaaay down in ratings. From an average of a 9.3 in '73 it fell to a 4.4 in '74 and was down in the 2's prior to the sale, so it was probably not billing much at all.
 
Well, I'm 55 (yes, really;) and actually enjoyed KOY with that old (REALLY old) stuff. I have a soft spot for Mathis, Andy Williams, Sinatra, etc., along with the metal and classic rock from the 70s and 80s. Might be a terrible idea, but I always thought that had that station been on FM, it would have found an audience. There are a lot of us oldsters out there, and it might have earned some decent ratings--probably more than a crappy low power AM signal would accomplish. But then again, I love radio--rarely watch TV during the day--and appreciate a variety of programming. I'm a layman with no radio experience except for building a SW receiver with my dad in high school--but still love DXing and SWL.

Point is, with all the crap on radio anymore, is there an audience for these old standards on FM? AM seems to have been taken over by right wing talk, religious stations, and Spanish language programming, so for any music outside of satellite, you have to go to FM. Frustrating for those of us in the civilian world who appreciate radio.
 
flashman1 said:
Well, I'm 55 (yes, really;) and actually enjoyed KOY with that old (REALLY old) stuff. I have a soft spot for Mathis, Andy Williams, Sinatra, etc., along with the metal and classic rock from the 70s and 80s. Might be a terrible idea, but I always thought that had that station been on FM, it would have found an audience. There are a lot of us oldsters out there, and it might have earned some decent ratings--probably more than a crappy low power AM signal would accomplish. But then again, I love radio--rarely watch TV during the day--and appreciate a variety of programming. I'm a layman with no radio experience except for building a SW receiver with my dad in high school--but still love DXing and SWL.

Point is, with all the crap on radio anymore, is there an audience for these old standards on FM? AM seems to have been taken over by right wing talk, religious stations, and Spanish language programming, so for any music outside of satellite, you have to go to FM. Frustrating for those of us in the civilian world who appreciate radio.

I'm 12 years older than you are Flash but I agree with you. I'd love to have the old KOY on a good FM signal. Probably even enough to make me forget about the old Coyote and smooooooth jazz.
 
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