I think you can answer your own question.11-watt translator.
What was the issue?
Moody didn't cancel it, the FCC did because the license expired back in July (per the STA filed by K225DG last year).Today, Moody Bible got around to cancelling K225DG (92.9) , the 11-watt translator. I think the translator operated from Jumpoff Joe, taking a feed from KMBI Spokane.
What was the issue? Was there interference from elsewhere?
11 watts on Jump Off Joe is actually pretty good - enough to get a signal well outside the Tri-Cities, though not quite all the way to Moses Lake.I think you can answer your own question.
Why's it called "Jump Off Joe"?11 watts on Jump Off Joe is actually pretty good - enough to get a signal well outside the Tri-Cities, though not quite all the way to Moses Lake.
What was that station 40 years ago? I remember it in the late 70s and early 80s as automated Top 40 using the Drake-Chenault XT40 format. I'd hear it when we camped out in Mt. Rainier National Park.As someone who helped align the STL for 97.1 about 40 years ago, I can verify that 97.1 broadcasts from Pike's Peak. It's a heck of a view, but a troublesome road...especially in the winter and spring. 95.7, 89.7, 100.7, 93.3 and 91.3 are also up there. Very popular location for broadcasters.
It still is, I can get it in Moses Lake when I have my antenna pointed south.I figured that the Walla Walla translator was no longer relaying KGDC.
Your memory is really good! When I joined the combo in October 1982:What was that station 40 years ago? I remember it in the late 70s and early 80s as automated Top 40 using the Drake-Chenault XT40 format. I'd hear it when we camped out in Mt. Rainier National Park.
So was it still Top 40, or had it flipped to something else by then (I know it went to album rock, but I'm pretty sure there was another format in between)?
Thanks for the response and the additional information...nice to know how it changed after I was no longer listening in intermittently.Your memory is really good! When I joined the combo in October 1982:
KHIT AM1320 was playing Drake's automated American Fun Radio program. Totally automated except for live local news in the mornings and at noon. AFR was basically oldies of the 50s/60s. Lots of Beach Boys. Lots of early Beatles. Elvis. But the station existed almost entirely because we had the local clearance for Paul Harvey
KSXT 97.1FM (XT97) was playing Drake's Rock 40 format called XT40. Yes, the calls were named after the format- this won't be the last time- see below. At that time we were live assist in the morning and locally voicetracked the other 19 hours per day.
This isn't the only place known as Jump Off Joe. It was an old, (dating from the late 1800s) but fairly common pioneer nickname for a butte or ridge overlooking a city.Why's it called "Jump Off Joe"?