Nick said:Oh well, the next doomsday is December 21, 2012. Let's hope the Wall street protest is over by then.
Why?
Nick said:Oh well, the next doomsday is December 21, 2012. Let's hope the Wall street protest is over by then.
R.F. Burns said:Nick said:Oh well, the next doomsday is December 21, 2012. Let's hope the Wall street protest is over by then.
Why?
Nick said:R.F. Burns said:Nick said:Oh well, the next doomsday is December 21, 2012. Let's hope the Wall street protest is over by then.
Why?
Now I support the causes of the Wall street protestors, and even joined in myself. But it loses its appeal after a certain time. If it's still around by 12/21/12, the protest would have lost its original meaning and most likely would become a camp for the homeless in NYC. At least that guy who donated his life savings to Family Radio now has a place to live, in the middle of Zuccotti Park.
I wonder what Family Radio's next doomsday is going to be. No one will believe them, or any other group claiming that doomsday is nigh. With 3 failed predictions, Family Radio should just sell all their stations since no one will trust what they say.
disney fanatic said:I don't really care about this whole doomsday thing for 12/21/12, according to the source that an asteroid called Apopheus will hit Earth on April 13th, 2036. That must be about 25 years from now.
badjef said:Empire, here we come. The transmitter room is already swept and clean.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
1.) 94.7 covers the 5 boroughs, but not well. If it did, Z100 would have never moved from the same location. It also has my birthtown of Newark as its City Of License. (My parents are still apologizing to me)reelyreal said:badjef said:Empire, here we come. The transmitter room is already swept and clean.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
What would you gain by moving to Empire? If it were even possible (it's a REALLY tight squeeze) you'd have to drop power to a B1 and go directional. 94.7 covers the five boroughs from Newark, doesn't it?
Aside from the fact that there's no room on Empire for a directional antenna, why would you want to pay the ridiculous rent and build out a new facility for a station that will always be licensed to Newark, and covers the city anyways?
Nick said:R.F. Burns said:Nick said:Oh well, the next doomsday is December 21, 2012. Let's hope the Wall street protest is over by then.
Why?
Now I support the causes of the Wall street protestors, and even joined in myself. But it loses its appeal after a certain time. If it's still around by 12/21/12, the protest would have lost its original meaning and most likely would become a camp for the homeless in NYC. At least that guy who donated his life savings to Family Radio now has a place to live, in the middle of Zuccotti Park.
I wonder what Family Radio's next doomsday is going to be. No one will believe them, or any other group claiming that doomsday is nigh. With 3 failed predictions, Family Radio should just sell all their stations since no one will trust what they say.
In the scheme of things, not that many years. These things take time which is why you don't want to drag your feet. The license for 105.9 was in disarray for many years.WNTIRadio said:105.9 has been on Empire for years. 600W ERP into the master antenna. B1.
since the eventual new owner of the license is unknown at this point, if it is Cumulus, they already control the license for 94.7 in Springfield.There's a full B 94.7 in Springfield, Ma that they would have to protect with such a move.A drop to B1 is likely.
Yeah, don't remind me. Z100 went from the "baby pea shooter transmitter" to "The Flamethrower" and since I was living in Jackson, NJ at the time, I had about 3 days of clear Z before I had a battle with another Z in Philly as WKSZ "Kiss 100".Z-100 could make the move because it was getting farther away from the 100.3 outside of Philly.
jmtillery said:Realizing I may be overlooking something relevant, if non-directional WMAS-FM 94.7 class B Springfield, Massachusetts is preventing co-channel WFME-FM 94.7 class B from operating as a full class B non-directionally from the Empire State Building, then how is WPAT-FM 93.1 class B operating non-directionally from lower Manhattan simultaneously with non-directional and co-channel WHYN-FM 93.1 class B, also in Springfield? In both scenarios WPAT and WHYN are both full class B FMs and both are the same distance from each other that WFME as a full class B would be from its co-channel WMAS should WFME re-locate to the Empire State Building.
WPAT is a special case as a result of losing their main antenna on 9/11. They moved back to Empire following an interim move. When it was decided 1WTC would not have an antenna, they applied for a permanant change to Empire.reelyreal said:jmtillery said:Realizing I may be overlooking something relevant, if non-directional WMAS-FM 94.7 class B Springfield, Massachusetts is preventing co-channel WFME-FM 94.7 class B from operating as a full class B non-directionally from the Empire State Building, then how is WPAT-FM 93.1 class B operating non-directionally from lower Manhattan simultaneously with non-directional and co-channel WHYN-FM 93.1 class B, also in Springfield? In both scenarios WPAT and WHYN are both full class B FMs and both are the same distance from each other that WFME as a full class B would be from its co-channel WMAS should WFME re-locate to the Empire State Building.
The short answer is "they can't." At least not so far. WPAT applied for 6kw from ESB, and that was denied in 2003 due to interference with co-channel WHYN-FM. There's a petition for reconsideration that's been in limbo since 2003, and while they're waiting, they're operating with a low power STA from ESB (4kw.)
Can you give me an example of an on-channel booster?
Every argument is centered upon a false assumption that these moves and upgrades will have to happen under the existing conditions.danikayser84 said:If 94.7/WFME moves to ESB, it'll either have to (a) go directional to protect co-channel WMAS in Springfield, or (b) downgrade to B1 status... which one would be more feasible for a prospective owner/engineer? The top of the ESB is crowded enough as it is, so it'll be difficult to install a directional at the top... what'd non-directional B1 be from ESB in terms of watts?
WQXR also can't upgrade due to WBLI on Long Island, WCHR-FM on the Jersey Shore, WHCN in Hartford, etc... pretty boxed in as a B1 where it is![]()
If 94.7/WFME moves to ESB, it'll either have to (a) go directional to protect co-channel WMAS in Springfield, or (b) downgrade to B1 status... which one would be more feasible for a prospective owner/engineer? The top of the ESB is crowded enough as it is, so it'll be difficult to install a directional at the top... what'd non-directional B1 be from ESB in terms of watts?
WQXR also can't upgrade due to WBLI on Long Island, WCHR-FM on the Jersey Shore, WHCN in Hartford, etc... pretty boxed in as a B1 where it is
Included with that pre-1963 grandfather is that little pesky 800kc spacing reference. WNYU and WKCR both fall into that.WNTIRadio said:The spacing requirements don't matter for non-comm stations, such as WFUV and WBGO. It's all based on contour overlap protection, there is an 89.1 in the Bronx, WNYU. There is also 89.9, WKCR. Non-comms can move around much easier because all they have to do is protect existing contours of co-channel, adjacent, 2nd adjacent and 3rd adjacent channels.
In the commercial band, there is a table of allotments to contend with, as well as minimum spacing rules for each class of stations. Sometimes, a station can't move because it has to protect a potential applicant that is listed in the table of allotments! It may not be on the air, but you gotta space enough away from it.
Much of NYC and the burbs are pre-1963 grandfathered short spacings. They would never happen today, but because they're already in place, everyone lives with them.
http://transition.fcc.gov/mb/audio/spacing/index.html