Heard them play Good-Bye Yellow Brick Road and then shut down a little while ago. They be gone......
RR
Heard them play Good-Bye Yellow Brick Road and then shut down a little while ago. They be gone......
RR
Gone for good? Why?
For openers, their 27-acre transmitter site is worth a LOT more than the station, so the local junior college next door is buying it. Then there's WAIT's owner, Fred Eychaner, who's already worth a few hundred million....but he's now in his 70s, and would probably like some pocket change before he rides off into the sunset.
And no one wants to continue the station with a new site?
And no one wants to continue the station with a new site?
It's a 2500 watt daytimer without a translator. Not much one can do with that.
It's a 2500 watt daytimer without a translator. Not much one can do with that.
I thought they had to protect Waterloo IA and Denver to the west, Cleveland to the east, and Milwaukee's 860 to the northeast. I would have to guess that any future operation on 850 in the far NW suburbs would be omnidirectional. How could they run more than 500 watts if that is the case, and unless they could get an FM translator, who would listen?
Was WCLR two towers or three when they were 500 watts? It looks like a 1:2:1 binomial broadside inline design, with the towers spaced somewhat less than 180 degrees. If it was a 1:1 design when it was 500 watts, the lobes would be relatively wider. WKBZ/WGVS had an application for 10000 watts at about the time that Crystal Lake was trying to increase to 2500 watts.
I thought they had to protect Waterloo IA and Denver to the west, Cleveland to the east, and Milwaukee's 860 to the northeast. I would have to guess that any future operation on 850 in the far NW suburbs would be omnidirectional. How could they run more than 500 watts if that is the case, and unless they could get an FM translator, who would listen?