Lancer said:Yeah because radio is SO much better now than it was. Not.
DavidEduardo said:dfaulkner said:An important point that's been mentioned or alluded to several times in this thread... Every Station Should Be Required To Always Have At Least One Person On Duty Who Can Go On The Air Immediately In The Event Of A Local Emergency.
....One of the main reasons stations started broadcasting after 11 PM or Midnight was to insure that the transmitter was on at the start of morning drive. And anyone who did engineering in the 50's and 60's remembers being called by an impatient GM because the transmitter did not turn on... the solution was not to turn it off......
dfaulkner said:A question that came to mind, (not trying to sound smart.)....How did that help stations (such as KLIF) that use different transmitters for day & night ?
dfaulkner said:DavidEduardo said:....One of the main reasons stations started broadcasting after 11 PM or Midnight was to insure that the transmitter was on at the start of morning drive. And anyone who did engineering in the 50's and 60's remembers being called by an impatient GM because the transmitter did not turn on... the solution was not to turn it off......
A question that came to mind, (not trying to sound smart.)....How did that help stations (such as KLIF) that use different transmitters for day & night ?
Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:dfaulkner said:A question that came to mind, (not trying to sound smart.)....How did that help stations (such as KLIF) that use different transmitters for day & night ?
I think I hear two different thoughts in this thread about being on over night.
The first one was gathering audience during the early hours so that when "drive time" came you didn't have to "build audience" from zero at sign on. Some of the overnight crowd was already in the room. (That part worked for stations like KLIF with two different transmitter sites.)
Then I read where David Eduardo chimed in with a second benefit for the traditional single-site transmitter operation: We knew the transmitter would be working when the critical drive-time began.
Transmitters and airplanes have that in common. If a transmitter is on the verge of failing, it will probably fall-off-the-cliff some morning when you throw the high voltage to a cold box. (Some stations used to leave the filaments on all night on the old tube-type transmitters.)
From a pilots point of view, taking off is about as easy pie. But it is the time in every flight when I am most tense with parts of my anatomy puckered. If the engine is going to fail there is a high probability it will happen when you are at throttle-to-the-wall full-horsepower during take-off. When it does, you gotta' think fast.
I think there has to be more than 4 or 5 stations that use more than 1 transmitter.DavidEduardo said:dfaulkner said:DavidEduardo said:....One of the main reasons stations started broadcasting after 11 PM or Midnight was to insure that the transmitter was on at the start of morning drive. And anyone who did engineering in the 50's and 60's remembers being called by an impatient GM because the transmitter did not turn on... the solution was not to turn it off......
A question that came to mind, (not trying to sound smart.)....How did that help stations (such as KLIF) that use different transmitters for day & night ?
As far as I know, there are less than 10 such operations in the entire US. Maybe less than 4 or 5 (not counting daytimers that have a very low wattage night power that they run from the studios).
TheBigA said:Lancer said:Yeah because radio is SO much better now than it was. Not.
The present is never as good as our memory of the past, and the reality of the past is never as good as our memory.
KVCE (1160)LibertyNT said:I think there has to be more than 4 or 5 stations that use more than 1 transmitter.DavidEduardo said:dfaulkner said:DavidEduardo said:....One of the main reasons stations started broadcasting after 11 PM or Midnight was to insure that the transmitter was on at the start of morning drive. And anyone who did engineering in the 50's and 60's remembers being called by an impatient GM because the transmitter did not turn on... the solution was not to turn it off......
A question that came to mind, (not trying to sound smart.)....How did that help stations (such as KLIF) that use different transmitters for day & night ?
As far as I know, there are less than 10 such operations in the entire US. Maybe less than 4 or 5 (not counting daytimers that have a very low wattage night power that they run from the studios).
Thats 5 right there off the top of my head. They all have 2 sites two different transmitters. But could be That I misunderstood your answer.![]()
KKLF (1700)
KVNS (1700)
KAAM (770)
KHSE (700)
KFXR (1190)
Ya, KAAM... not so much. Only von transsmitten location.dfaulkner said:I didn't realize that KAAM had two sites. I know of the one near Wylie. Where's the other ?
Sgt. Hans G. Schultz said:Ya, KAAM... not so much. Only von transsmitten location.dfaulkner said:I didn't realize that KAAM had two sites. I know of the one near Wylie. Where's the other ?
Nein. You can't do dat vit AM towers und transsmittens. Only der FM.LibertyNT said:Take KHSE Off Too. Only One Site as well.
Doesnt KAAM And KHSE use the Same Tower?
Lancer said:And somebody's idea of the future rarely is as good or better than it will be.
Sgt. Hans G. Schultz said:Nein. You can't do dat vit AM towers und transsmittens. Only der FM.LibertyNT said:Take KHSE Off Too. Only One Site as well.
Doesnt KAAM And KHSE use the Same Tower?
onmic said:Eventually station ownership has decided that Jacks, Bobs, Bettys and whoever else would sound just fine with no hosts, not even in major market mornings and the thing is that they can stand their own. They may not be top 5 in a major or anything, but cruch the numbers vs. overhead and take the number 7 or 10 spot with limited programming payroll.
Vell den, dis ist der miracles of der modern science, ya?DavidEduardo said:Actually, AM diplexing is very common. WFAN and WCBS is a good example, and on Oahu, there are 3 and even 4 AMs on individual towers given the scarcity of land.
In LA, 1150 and 1020 share a 5-tower directional.