poledo said:
Interesting read there on WGNS. They don't explain in that article why they feel they need two FM translators on the same tower. Also wondering how they claim to be the first AM with an STA for an FM simulcast. Wouldn't that honor fall on WJNT in Jackson, MS? Or at least WJNT would deserve an honorable mention in their story.
Actually, that would be WCRT-1160 in Donelson, Tennessee. (then known as WAMB) They got their STA in 1988. WJNT didn't get theirs until 1999, best I can tell. But both of those facilities are in CDBS as boosters, not translators.
Of course, that's a legal definition; there is no engineering difference between the FM relays of WCRT & WJNT, and those of WGNS and WCJW.
But I think that's how WGNS gets away with calling themselves the first
Both WGNS translators were licensed, as regular translators, well before the FCC allowed their use to relay WGNS. They were authorized to relay two FM stations out of Lebanon, Tennessee and were in fact doing so before the STA came along.
WCJW has outdone themselves with 4 translators (Radio-Locator actually lists 5). With that many translators wouldn't it make a whole lot more sense to purchase a full power FM?
There aren't any in Warsaw. I don't know the area well enough to know if there are any in elsewhere in the county. It's a very heavily populated area & I'd be surprised if there was any economically realistic way to get a new channel assigned.
The Atlanta and Birmingham translators seem to be adequately covering the cities with a single 250 watt signal. Down here in Mobile that would be a difficult task covering both sides of Mobile Bay with one translator (we'll find out whenever they turn on 100.3) or even impossible to cover both ends of the true radio market, Mobile and Pensacola, without two translators.
Depends on the antenna height, I suppose. The aforementioned 102.1 in Nashville covers the city just fine. Another big translator got lit up a few weeks ago on 89.9 on one of the TV towers. Its predicted coverage is almost as good as a full Class A FM, and reality seems to match theory fairly well. I live 20 miles away & receive a solid signal on the car radio.
I'm sure no Class A station could cover both Mobile and Pensacola, and I'm sure the same could be said for any single translator. But the neat thing about translators is that (compared to full-power stations) it's a lot easier to get your hands on two
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BTW, to be completely off-topic, there is some pretty good historic information elsewhere on the WGNS site.