Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:
If I recall, wasn't there an FM station that left the air back in the early 60's, basically because someone (an engineer) got electrocuted after bypassing the safety locks? I believe it was WLOV. Any thoughts?
That was WPFM. There was a gruesome story connected with that. Chuck B. (purposely left name out) was doing transmitter maintenance on a Sunday morning while the station was broadcasting a taped classical show hosted by then retired WPRO-TV news anchor Mort Blender. Chuck had bypassed the interlocks and reached inside for something that should have been simple. Verdi's "Requiem" was playing at the time. He may have stumbled and fell in or just brushed something but, in any case, nobody knew until Blender's taped show had ended and the station went quiet.
The station was in an old house on Smith Hill, very close to the statehouse in Providence; self-supporting tower in the back yard.
If I recall the sequence properly (and it's over 50 years, so don't be surprised if I have it twisted a bit) the station started out as WJAR-FM. Was given by the Sinclair family to Providence Bible College which became Providence-Barrington Bible College which became Barrington Bible College which then sold it. I believe it was part owned by Judge Harold Arcarro who also had a small stake in WNET-TV (now WNAC, Channel 16 originally but which lasted only a couple of years under the original ownership/call) also a piece Basil Brewer's (New Bedford Standard-Times) TV venture which, in 1959 became WTEV, 6, originally licensed to New Bedford then to the split New Bedford/Providence.
Anyway, WPFM was no market factor and it was ultimately sold to Brown University which turned it into WBUR with a short antenna on a university building where it stayed for some years before moving to a leased site.
Bob Stone was the last PD for WPFM. They were seriously classical. I vividly recall their unique turntables; two of them. Each was some exotic brand (I think German made). Each in a separate cabinet suspended from the ceiling on chains with sandbags in the base for stability. They were only a couple of inches off the floor. All that because the old building vibrated with traffic; a problem effectively eliminated by the chains.
Again, memory suggests that the deciding factor in the final sale was Urban Renewal. The house/studio and tower were bought up by a redevelopment agency and the cost of relocation made no sense given the low potential for FM revenue at the time.
Yes, I was there so none of this is out of books....only from memory.