Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:
I'm not sure why you propose that NO small communities would have an AM. There are communities that can be served very well with 1KW fulltime. If someone has the fortitude to take on the whole industry with a shakeup like you propose (and probably needs to happen!) maybe there should be additional "graveyard frequencies" set up. Jason: are you aware that in some mountain rural communities FM is the pits for a small operator. Line of Sight FM signals do not penetrate down into the valleys well.
It would be an interesting computer programmer exercise to plot it out just for grins, but I am not sure that there are enough FM channels to allocate a class A to every small community in America. They might have to think about 1kw instead of 6kw to get it done.
There are little towns that currently have two AMs. They probably shouldn't, but they do. Would your plan offer a class A FM to each of them, or would you have the two AM operators meet on main street at high noon and fight a duel to the death with the survivor getting the ONE FM allocation?
Jason: Are you a Bible student? Do you know the story of King Solomon who displayed his gift of wisdom when two women came before him arguing over a baby. Each claimed to be the mother. So the King said: Bring me a sword and I will split the baby in two and each of you can have half. One woman said "Great". The other woman said, "No let her have the baby." Solomon knew the rightful mother would NOT agree to the splitting of the baby.
Who do you propose would be out King Solomon and be the referee on which stations are wiped out so other stations can have enough power to serve and entire city in the 21st century size. Who will decide which stations are just "parked" and thus should be forfeited so that another licensee can have something better?
Thanks for bringing up the topic. I would agree that change of someking is called for. I suspect every variation that other people post here will also have some really tough "political" issues to overcome.
Good points. And, perhaps there could be some part of the band that could be "reserved" for a some local AM radio service in areas such as you describe. (I agree mountain terrain could be an issue that could merit an exeception to the rule.)
I did smile at your King Solomon reference, and I'll grant you your comparison is valid.
But, if you think back...way back when...the Federal Radio Commission (in realizing AM had severe interference problems due to the fact that there was little regulation back then) actually tossed a couple hundred operators off the air to reduce interference. A more regional service on AM might open up the band a bit to allow digital service to have less in the way of problems. (Please don't argue IBOC here...I have concerns about it, but no formal opinion either way yet.)
The AM digital that I have heard does sound great. (It could open up the way toward AM being able to be something more than talk and, potentially, be more competitive. Hey, full service, or some form of it, might be able to come back.) But the interference problem, is the problem with AM. There are too many stations on the band. And, please don't misunderstand me. I know there are successful AM local operations. But, I just think the current situation, the current standards, don't meet the needs of the industry. For AM to be healthy, it's got to be heard in a situation where it sounds better than the crap receivers they have in car radios and boom boxes.
I'm would be willing (and in fact would love to see): modifications to this basic idea. I don't think a successful, profitiable service should be taken away from a smaller community. But where I live, there's several AM stations that I can think of which are, frankly, a total waste of spectrum space. They don't make money. They're worth about $100-$200 grand tops. Why should they be mucking up the band when a more regional service, run by a broadcast company that understood the responsibility that goes with that could do it better?