This from the WSM website:
By late 1932, WSM had joined a small, elite group of maximum-power, Class 1-A, clear-channel broadcasters. The stations new 50,000 watt status, coupled with the low 650 kilocycle frequency, made WSM a nation-spanning giant. (Clear-channel status meant it was the only station in the entire U.S. permitted to broadcast on the 650 frequency.) At the heart of this expansion was a diamond-shaped, vertical antenna which was 878 feet high, the tallest tower in North America at the time.
What does Class 1-A mean and does having a low 650 kilocycle frequency increase propagation? I also read on another site that WSM's tower would have to be 1000 feet tall to reach its maximum coverage on its frequency. Is kilocycles another word for kilowatts?
By late 1932, WSM had joined a small, elite group of maximum-power, Class 1-A, clear-channel broadcasters. The stations new 50,000 watt status, coupled with the low 650 kilocycle frequency, made WSM a nation-spanning giant. (Clear-channel status meant it was the only station in the entire U.S. permitted to broadcast on the 650 frequency.) At the heart of this expansion was a diamond-shaped, vertical antenna which was 878 feet high, the tallest tower in North America at the time.
What does Class 1-A mean and does having a low 650 kilocycle frequency increase propagation? I also read on another site that WSM's tower would have to be 1000 feet tall to reach its maximum coverage on its frequency. Is kilocycles another word for kilowatts?