WKXW never uses the term "Central Jersey",
and all the other stations in Trenton are pretending to be Philadelphia stations.
Meanwhile in the Middlesex/Somerset/Union market, WMGQ and WCTC make prominent use of the term "Central Jersey" to refer to those counties as well as the parts of Monmouth, Mercer, and Hunterdon Counties that their signals cover.
That focus is news to me. The whole reason for WPST's move from 97.5 to 94.5 was to give them better coverage of Philadelphia. And then 97.5 moved their transmitter to give them better coverage of Philly as well; now it bears the call letters of a Philadelphia station (WPEN-FM) and calls itself "Philadelphia's First FM Sports Station".WPST sells very well, based on its Central New Jersey "neither Philadelphia nor New York" focus... as does WKXW.
as I said, the industry reference to "Central New Jersey" is the Trenton market. The other market you mention, Middlesex / Somerset, is just an embedded portion of the NYC MSA.
That focus is news to me. The whole reason for WPST's move from 97.5 to 94.5 was to give them better coverage of Philadelphia. And then 97.5 moved their transmitter to give them better coverage of Philly as well; now it bears the call letters of a Philadelphia station (WPEN-FM) and calls itself "Philadelphia's First FM Sports Station".
As far as the radio listener is concerned, the stations that call themselves "Central Jersey" on the air are based in New Brunswick, not Trenton. Listeners don't know or care what the "industry" calls things.
But this thread is about the "WNSH Signal" and is thus about an analysis of effective and useful coverage of stations. We're not talking about listener perceptions... we are talking about signals and their potential to generate listening.
The vast majority of RadioDiscussions users are listeners, not radio industry experts, and thus at times we may use terminology differently than the "industry" uses it. Neither is more "correct" than the other -- it's just a matter of what perspective you're coming from.![]()
The "local", "distant" and "fringe" lines on the FM maps correspond to the predicted 60, 50, and 40 dBu field strength contours respectively.
The "local", "distant" and "fringe" lines on the AM maps corresponds to the predicted 2.5, 0.5, and 0.15 mV/m contours respectively (of the horizontal groundwave propogation only).
To David Eduardo:
In your post of 8-29-13 you said that the useful/ratings coverage is basically 20% inside the red contour. Does that mean that only 20% of that area is useful, OR is that 80% (100% - 20%) of the space inside the red contour?? The way it was stated is a bit confusing at least to me. Thanks in advance for responding.
Nobody said they did.
Neither WPST nor WPRB have any impact in the Philadelphia market. WPST sells very well, based on its Central New Jersey "neither Philadelphia nor New York" focus... as does WKXW.
The three AM's in the market have no effective penetration of Philadelphia, either, so I have no idea why you think any of them "pretend" to be Philadelphia stations.
WMGQ's 65 dbu is essentially 95% inside Middlesex and Somerset; for all practical purposes, they have no useful coverage of any other county. WCTC's useful daytime coverage barely touches Somerset and does not even cover half of Middlesex by day. By night, it is vastly worse.
The stations may or may not make geographical references on the air. But, as I said, the industry reference to "Central New Jersey" is the Trenton market. The other market you mention, Middlesex / Somerset, is just an embedded portion of the NYC MSA.