Robert Douglas
Banned
I live in two cities, alternating every month or two.
City 1, San Antonio (2M people) - at least 30 AM signals all sounding good now and each providing a nice service. Iheart flagship WOAI and Alpha's KTSA are certainly profitable. Salem has two big signals. Several sports stations, Cox has two. Lots of foreign language and religious teaching. AM band seems to be flourishing here.
City 2, Bella Vista AR (small town inside a 500K market) - Basically nothing on the AM dial receivable above the noise. The one that is receivable has no modulation, which would seem to be a money saving scheme to lower the power bill as they have an FM translator and seem to think that just running an AM carrier keeps them legal.
So, what to do? I like all of David's suggestions above. But, why not open up the band to low power small biz owners for the low density areas that have no AM service? Let them set up daytime service with no tower, just a longwire.
City 1, San Antonio (2M people) - at least 30 AM signals all sounding good now and each providing a nice service. Iheart flagship WOAI and Alpha's KTSA are certainly profitable. Salem has two big signals. Several sports stations, Cox has two. Lots of foreign language and religious teaching. AM band seems to be flourishing here.
City 2, Bella Vista AR (small town inside a 500K market) - Basically nothing on the AM dial receivable above the noise. The one that is receivable has no modulation, which would seem to be a money saving scheme to lower the power bill as they have an FM translator and seem to think that just running an AM carrier keeps them legal.
So, what to do? I like all of David's suggestions above. But, why not open up the band to low power small biz owners for the low density areas that have no AM service? Let them set up daytime service with no tower, just a longwire.