stan said:
Mike O said:
KLDE 107.5 use to be good on many ocassions to near downtown Dallas, how did 107.5 fare this time, if you monitored them?
I was unable to pick up KLDE until I got south of Huntsville. I, too, remember 107.5 having a great signal in the Beaumont area as well all the way back to the days of when it was KZFX. Perhaps the digital broadcasting has decreased its coverage, but if that is the only consideration, why isn't 97.1 affected? Or doesn't it have HD broadcasting?
97.1 isn't digital yet, I believe that thay plan on turning on the the HD sometime in January or February. When I picked up 97.1 south of Texarkana it wasn't tropo conditions, just a damn good signal that kept getting stronger towards Houston.
I remember having a solid signal from 107.5 in BMT and up to Silsbee some years ago, and this was on a daily basis. I rarely get out in the direction of BMT anymore and didn't know that 107.5's signal was no more. Could well be the digital signal, it is suppose to decrease coverage. I don't have a HD radio, maybe when the price drops under $50 I will consider a purchase. Depending on how HD radios sell for the Christmas season will determine if the price for an HD receiver drops down to a more reasonable cost. Since I don't own a HD radio, I really have no personal experience from any HD station, only what I've read about HD radio and I don't like what I've read so far. Wish the FCC would have the balls to admit AM IBOC is a failure and give DRM a try. It could operate 24/7 and is suppose to increase coverage of an AM station slightly.
I wouldn't trade the radio in my SUV for a HD radio, even if they threw in an extra $100 to swap out radios. Nissan has a fine radio in the Xterra and reception is excellent and dependable on both bands. I had 1660 from Waco like a local at lunch time from Tomball back to The Galleria area Friday. Of course it is around that time of year that AM radio signals do much better in distance.
-juan- said:
I thought Country legends got pounded by KIOX. ???
I think what people are talking about is the tropo season, because in that case, you can say that KBXX goes all the way to Freer TX, (small town just 55 miles west of Laredo). Now that's a good coverage ;D (about 250 miles)
I remember back then I was able to receive KRBE and KQQK (back on 106.5) all the way into the Mexican Inspection Point (that's about 10-15 miles into Mexico) Now, there is a 106.5 in Laredo and 104.1 has been clovered by Wild in the Valley and Digital of San Antonio.
There shouldn't be any reason that KIOX 96.9 would wipe out 97.1 Country Legends if the radio is selective enough. When we we get a good tropro opening I can get station after station on on 1st adjacents with no bleed over. As long as the signals are strong enough they co-reside fine. With just a mild enhancement of signals I get 104.7 KKYS College Station, 104.9 KPTY Missouri City and 105.1 KYKS Lufkin all clear and no bleed over.
In the 1986 I spent a year on a project in Austin and KQQK was a regular strong station in Austin. This is when KQQK was a hybred English/Spanish Rock station. It was the most reliable station from the Houston area, 2nd to KHMX 96.5 [KSRR at time].
Unfortunately the Houston FM's do not make the distance to Dallas any longer with all the new stations that have been shoehirned in along the I-45 Corridor. The FCC is turning the FM band into a jumble of signals, getting close to the problem with AM. Add all the translators and many stations have lost a great deal coverage they had 10 years ago. When the "Great Translator Invasion of 2003" finally is finished, if ever, the coverage of many stations will decrease even more.
Mike O