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S.E. KY Radio

B

bp37918

Guest
Hey Broker:

I was in your neck of the woods over the weekend and had lunch in Cumberland Gap. Got to listen to your stations for a few minutes. Couldn't get the 1230 station but listen to WFXY 1490 a little..the signal faded out about 10 miles down the road. Any upgrades coming soon?
 
Glad to hear you were in the area. Bet you had lunch at Webb's, didn'tcha? GREAT food! You should have stopped by the radio stations...You are welcome any time. If you know you are coming and it's after hours, email me and I'll give you my cell number.

I could write for days about the upgrades in the works. Let's start with WFXY.

The first improvement will be a new BE 1kW solid-state transmitter (actually a pair...one for each station). I've already put in a new Optimod 8100, but I can't push it any at all, or the old transmitter groans. We are still running the original 1967 CCA. It won't even make full power unless it's exactly 68 degrees outside. Any hotter or colder, and she'll get mad. The new BE is on the way. I want to make speakers shake when it's installed. I've also replaced the STL jumper on the building here, which made a difference. When we are modulating properly and have good processing, the signal should carry a whole lot further. As-is, they barely make it past the 5mV contour.

At the moment, the biggest holdup is that I won't put anything new in the building until the new roof is installed and we do some light renovating. We had major storm damage last month, and the roof leaks like the Dick Cheney's press office. I'm haggling with the insurance adjuster at the moment. I'm planning to rip the studios out one by one and re-do the paint and flooring. Crazy as it sounds, I'm doing all hardwood, even in the studios. You know how dirty the carpet gets in radio stations. I want to see if wood floors will make things look and smell cleaner. The boards and source equipment will also be replaced. I'm locating the racks for both AMs, plus one extra for another acquisition I'll be announcing soon, in one room. It'll have separate HVAC and be kept at 68 degrees around the clock and calendar. We are also starting from scratch with wiring. You should see some of the rats-nests we have here. My theory is that we'll be MUCH better off to just rip everything out. That way, I know how everything is wired. We'll also have the wiring mapped and documented so that anybody working on the system here will know what they are working on. Novel idea huh?

Once we get things clean and fresh, I'm going to put in new automation. That'll allow us to do much more clean local programming. We are going to toss out the satellite automation totally and go with a mix of live and voice-tracked programming. WFXY will be live/local from 6am - 3pm at least to begin with, and WANO will have just a couple ours less live/local initially. But, until we get the new automation in, I don't have much choice except to stick with the bird. With our old system, I have no choice except a train-wreck after our news. Since we run between fifteen and twenty minutes of local news at the top of the our five times a day, we can't have a smooth re-join. Also, none of the switchers "talk" to each other. So, you'll be listening to the news on WANO, then hear thirty seconds of Madonna, then jump right into the middle of the Beach Boys. It makes me cringe every time I hear it, and I'm ashamed that it happens on one of my stations. It'll be fixed very soon.

Over at WANO, we have even more work than at WFXY. A new Transmitter is necessary there too. WANO has absolutely no real processing, so I'm going to stick on an Omnia3AM. The most important part will be a new ground system though. Apparently somebody really wanted the topsoil around the tower. You can just use your imagination, and think about what a dumptruck and backhoe did to the ground system. Both stations will get an essentially brand-new airchain, from microphone to transmitter, and even ground system at WANO. And, when things are settled, the signals should get out MUCH better. We have no way of monitoring WANO here in Middlesboro, even though we almost fall within the 5mV contour. Also, a year down the road, I'm hoping to build out a secondary studio/office site in Pineville, hopefully downtown. We need to be a bigger part of that community than we are.

This is quite a process, really, but I'm enjoying it. Years of neglect caused the stations to be in the state they are now, so they won't be corrected overnight. Fortunately, I have the money to invest in what we need. That's the easy part. The hard part, at least for me, is to be patient while we get everything done. Unfortunately, though, there are only so many hours in the day.

On the business side, things are screaming. January was the best month the stations have had in three years, and things are on the up-swing. I'm trying to get acclimated to the market and meet the people I need to. It's honestly great to be an owner again. Fortunately, despite the engineering neglect, the former owners did a GREAT job making sure the stations have good reputations in the community. They are both heritage stations which have essentially been asleep for seven years. It's an honor to be the one to wake them up.
 
Yeah, but with all the incredible improvements, I hear you may be
bringing some broke brainsurgeon on that thinks he knows everything and
gets his panties in a wad on a regular basis. Why would you do that?
The Spindoctor




> Glad to hear you were in the area. Bet you had lunch at
> Webb's, didn'tcha? GREAT food! You should have stopped by
> the radio stations...You are welcome any time. If you know
> you are coming and it's after hours, email me and I'll give
> you my cell number.
>
> I could write for days about the upgrades in the works.
> Let's start with WFXY.
>
> The first improvement will be a new BE 1kW solid-state
> transmitter (actually a pair...one for each station). I've
> already put in a new Optimod 8100, but I can't push it any
> at all, or the old transmitter groans. We are still running
> the original 1967 CCA. It won't even make full power unless
> it's exactly 68 degrees outside. Any hotter or colder, and
> she'll get mad. The new BE is on the way. I want to make
> speakers shake when it's installed. I've also replaced the
> STL jumper on the building here, which made a difference.
> When we are modulating properly and have good processing,
> the signal should carry a whole lot further. As-is, they
> barely make it past the 5mV contour.
>
> At the moment, the biggest holdup is that I won't put
> anything new in the building until the new roof is installed
> and we do some light renovating. We had major storm damage
> last month, and the roof leaks like the Dick Cheney's press
> office. I'm haggling with the insurance adjuster at the
> moment. I'm planning to rip the studios out one by one and
> re-do the paint and flooring. Crazy as it sounds, I'm doing
> all hardwood, even in the studios. You know how dirty the
> carpet gets in radio stations. I want to see if wood floors
> will make things look and smell cleaner. The boards and
> source equipment will also be replaced. I'm locating the
> racks for both AMs, plus one extra for another acquisition
> I'll be announcing soon, in one room. It'll have separate
> HVAC and be kept at 68 degrees around the clock and
> calendar. We are also starting from scratch with wiring. You
> should see some of the rats-nests we have here. My theory is
> that we'll be MUCH better off to just rip everything out.
> That way, I know how everything is wired. We'll also have
> the wiring mapped and documented so that anybody working on
> the system here will know what they are working on. Novel
> idea huh?
>
> Once we get things clean and fresh, I'm going to put in new
> automation. That'll allow us to do much more clean local
> programming. We are going to toss out the satellite
> automation totally and go with a mix of live and
> voice-tracked programming. WFXY will be live/local from 6am
> - 3pm at least to begin with, and WANO will have just a
> couple ours less live/local initially. But, until we get the
> new automation in, I don't have much choice except to stick
> with the bird. With our old system, I have no choice except
> a train-wreck after our news. Since we run between fifteen
> and twenty minutes of local news at the top of the our five
> times a day, we can't have a smooth re-join. Also, none of
> the switchers "talk" to each other. So, you'll be listening
> to the news on WANO, then hear thirty seconds of Madonna,
> then jump right into the middle of the Beach Boys. It makes
> me cringe every time I hear it, and I'm ashamed that it
> happens on one of my stations. It'll be fixed very soon.
>
> Over at WANO, we have even more work than at WFXY. A new
> Transmitter is necessary there too. WANO has absolutely no
> real processing, so I'm going to stick on an Omnia3AM. The
> most important part will be a new ground system though.
> Apparently somebody really wanted the topsoil around the
> tower. You can just use your imagination, and think about
> what a dumptruck and backhoe did to the ground system. Both
> stations will get an essentially brand-new airchain, from
> microphone to transmitter, and even ground system at WANO.
> And, when things are settled, the signals should get out
> MUCH better. We have no way of monitoring WANO here in
> Middlesboro, even though we almost fall within the 5mV
> contour. Also, a year down the road, I'm hoping to build out
> a secondary studio/office site in Pineville, hopefully
> downtown. We need to be a bigger part of that community than
> we are.
>
> This is quite a process, really, but I'm enjoying it. Years
> of neglect caused the stations to be in the state they are
> now, so they won't be corrected overnight. Fortunately, I
> have the money to invest in what we need. That's the easy
> part. The hard part, at least for me, is to be patient while
> we get everything done. Unfortunately, though, there are
> only so many hours in the day.
>
> On the business side, things are screaming. January was the
> best month the stations have had in three years, and things
> are on the up-swing. I'm trying to get acclimated to the
> market and meet the people I need to. It's honestly great to
> be an owner again. Fortunately, despite the engineering
> neglect, the former owners did a GREAT job making sure the
> stations have good reputations in the community. They are
> both heritage stations which have essentially been asleep
> for seven years. It's an honor to be the one to wake them
> up.
>
 
> Yeah, but with all the incredible improvements, I hear you
> may be
> bringing some broke brainsurgeon on that thinks he knows
> everything and
> gets his panties in a wad on a regular basis. Why would you
> do that?
> The Spindoctor


Well, because even though he can be a pain in the ass, he's a very talented programmer.
 
> > Yeah, but with all the incredible improvements, I hear you
>
> > may be
> > bringing some broke brainsurgeon on that thinks he knows
> > everything and
> > gets his panties in a wad on a regular basis. Why would
> you
> > do that?
> > The Spindoctor
>
>
> Well, because even though he can be a pain in the ass, he's
> a very talented programmer.
>
Talented programmer? I thought I encouraged you to stop smoking
crack.
 
> Glad to hear you were in the area. Bet you had lunch at
> Webb's, didn'tcha? GREAT food! You should have stopped by
> the radio stations...You are welcome any time. If you know
> you are coming and it's after hours, email me and I'll give
> you my cell number.
>

Not a bad guess considering there are only two places to eat in Cumberland Gap and one is closed for renovations. Only two if you don't count the Ramada Inn.
Next time I'll drop you a line.
 
> Only two if you don't count the Ramada Inn.


Ya can't count the Ramada now anyway...the restaurant there is closed too. LMU just bought the hotel, and they are tearing out the restaurant to renovate it. It's just Webbs now, and I swear they take a vacation once a month.
 
> be an owner again. Fortunately, despite the engineering
> neglect, the former owners did a GREAT job making sure the
> stations have good reputations in the community. They are
> both heritage stations which have essentially been asleep
> for seven years. It's an honor to be the one to wake them
> up.


Josh, you need any engineering help, give me a holler.

Scott
 
Take lots of pictures before you renovate and use them as before and after photo's and put them on the stations web site when you get one.
 
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