Dale Bickel assured me in an email that it is normal procedure for the FCC Engineers to rigorously technically analyze these types of Petitions before they go forward.
The protected F(50,50) contours are 54 dBu for Class B, 57 dBu for Class B1, and 60 dBu for all other classes. The 45 dBu F(50,50) applies to limits to complaints by stations about translator interference. It's quite complicated, and there's a high bar.Would allowing stations to go directional and upgrade without regard of spacing distances as long as existing stations' 45 DB is protected work? 100.5 in Atlanta could go on the Fish Stick with a directional antenna and not effect WSSL,'s 45. In fact the power directed East and North East could be reduced compared to what is happening now.
When some folks file these petitions for rulemaking, they are intended to benefit primarily their station. C4 was that way.. so was A10.Michi, thanks for the update you posted. I want your opinion on my question. With the limited number of stations that will ultimately be eligible for the upgrade, as well as the costs, legal, engineering and otherwise, will it be worth the few miles of coverage each station gains? I looked at 2 stations near me, both serving a city of 85k, that could upgrade, and used your figures on a map radius tool, and the coverage only increased by a few miles. One station I know would not pay for the upgrade, and the other ownership group is iffy on investing even one more dollar in their stations, so I really don't see either one happening. Also, looking at other stations in a 50 mile radius from me, I see so many stations limited by first-adjacent and co-channel spacing, that I think there may be 1 or 2 stations this would benefit, but no more. Does REC have any idea how many stations realistically this would benefit, and knowing the FCC and their changing whims, when or if this proposal becomes a reality?
Trust me.. they will. But we will be advancing our counter-proposed 73.207 numbers that reflect good engineering practice, 73.215 numbers that are just not arbitrary numbers pulled out of the sky and 73.807 numbers that were never put on the original petition.Dale Bickel assured me in an email that it is normal procedure for the FCC Engineers to rigorously technically analyze these types of Petitions before they go forward.
Thanks! This is exactly what I was hoping for.For now, if you want to look up the potential upgrade status of a Class A station or the potential for interference to a translator or LPFM station, go to
Class A10 Impact Check | REC Networks
and enter the station's call sign.
By comparison, taking CoQ10 provides many more tangible benefits than ever letting LPFM stations have full-class status.Aren't the 73.207 Table and related sections getting way too unwieldy with all the new classes? Originally, Distance Separation Requirements were supposed to SIMPLIFY the Allotment process to develop the Band. But there was just A, B, C, and D in the early 1960s, A and B before that. Some years ago, an associate and I began to call it the "Vitamin Table". What's next, a Class CoQ10?![]()
That would require an act of Congress. It's not going to happen any time soon, if ever.ever letting LPFM stations have full-class status.