The other thread that I started, SUCCESSFUL DAYTIMERS, drew a lot of very good responses. Let's see if lightning strikes again with another ``David vs. Goliath'' radio scenario.
Now called class C, once known as class IV (graveyard) facilities, faced the challenge of operating with only 250 watts on 1230, 1240, 1340, 1400, 1450 and 1490. The power was later raised to 1,000 watts day and still later to 1,000 watts at night. These stations struggled, especially at night, to fully serve their markets -- even before suburban sprawl and electronic noise totally doomed the class IVs.
To get started, I can think of two class IV stations that did very well in the 60's, facing larger direct competition in their formats and one of which also fight two 50,000 facilities in its markets:
1). WKDA/1240 in Nashville was top rated in Pulse, Hooper and ARB during a 10-15 year run with a top 40 format. WMAK with 5,000 watts was an also-ran in that format until about 1969. WSM and WLAC, both with 50,000 watts, attracted listeners outside the survey area at the time but didn't have the dominance of WKDA.
2). WCOL/1230 in Columbus. Another top 40 that had a long run of success, stretching into the early 70's. I never had access to the ratings for this market but display ads that Great Trails ran in SRDS indicated that ``New WCOL'', as it was branded for years, enjoyed strong listenership in Ohio's capital. I don't think it had a direct format competitor but WCOL did beat more powerful facilities such as WTVN with 5,000 watts at 610 and an arguably better signal from WBNS also with 5,000 watts but at 1460.
Now called class C, once known as class IV (graveyard) facilities, faced the challenge of operating with only 250 watts on 1230, 1240, 1340, 1400, 1450 and 1490. The power was later raised to 1,000 watts day and still later to 1,000 watts at night. These stations struggled, especially at night, to fully serve their markets -- even before suburban sprawl and electronic noise totally doomed the class IVs.
To get started, I can think of two class IV stations that did very well in the 60's, facing larger direct competition in their formats and one of which also fight two 50,000 facilities in its markets:
1). WKDA/1240 in Nashville was top rated in Pulse, Hooper and ARB during a 10-15 year run with a top 40 format. WMAK with 5,000 watts was an also-ran in that format until about 1969. WSM and WLAC, both with 50,000 watts, attracted listeners outside the survey area at the time but didn't have the dominance of WKDA.
2). WCOL/1230 in Columbus. Another top 40 that had a long run of success, stretching into the early 70's. I never had access to the ratings for this market but display ads that Great Trails ran in SRDS indicated that ``New WCOL'', as it was branded for years, enjoyed strong listenership in Ohio's capital. I don't think it had a direct format competitor but WCOL did beat more powerful facilities such as WTVN with 5,000 watts at 610 and an arguably better signal from WBNS also with 5,000 watts but at 1460.