I have an even simpler solution for WBAI....Sell it to someone who will flip it to Alternative Rock.
I have an even simpler solution for WBAI....Sell it to someone who will flip it to Alternative Rock.
I have an even simpler solution for WBAI....Sell it to someone who will flip it to Alternative Rock.
OK, I'm at the table, so I'll keep playing.
AM signals do not "go around" buildings. And they travel with the contours of land, like fog, while FM travels like a light beam... and is stopped by obstructions.
WBAI gets plenty of donations from New Jersey, about 50%. I was listening all night and this morning, they mentioned it on the air.
So what? Those areas are not in the New York MSA, and don't have help NYC stations in sales.
No, it would not. Because most people under 55 don't use AM, and sales is generated by 18-49 and 25 listenership (or some subset). Taking anything from FM to AM is not going to produce nice results.
Increase height, decrease ERP. Less power, harder penetration. I personally specified the moving of a station from a 570 watt facility at greater height to 6 kw at conforming class A height, and the ratings trippled with the same format. At 570 watts, the signal looked good on paper, but it could not get good reception anywhere.
Wrong. Some AMs with huge signals and the premium programming get good ratings. Most have neither good signals nor good ratings. And all have the issue of aging listener bases, no matter what they program.
Thank you for the job recomendation.
They are out of money everywhere. Pacifica HQ has no backup money, and the stations in SF, Houston, DC and LA as well as NY have made major cutbacks. They are not going to buy anything. They may have to sell something to keep the organization afloat, and they have two valuable commercial licenses, one of them being WBAI. But they also have a dysfunctional board of directors which is the root of the problems; your postings qualify you to be a star member of that board.
Interesting way to describe the AM signal, there is a local sky wave component though. As you know well, this increases to DX at night.
WBAI gets plenty of donations from New Jersey, about 50%. I was listening all night and this morning, they mentioned it on the air.
The older demo has more money, young folks here are not doing so well. I noticed, at least in the over night, a lot of older music being played.
This is true but with the antenna aready at approx 900 Feet, the signal reaches as far as it will go anyway,
...and weakens as energy is lost in air resistance (heating the air) and distance.
The only things blocking the signal are buildings, water towers and the hills in Statan Island.
I haven't seen yet the numbers, how much they would have to power down to use the WTC site. Perhaps we will find out more when other stations are moved there.
The did mention on air that they are now in the clear with paying the bills.
There is no discernible skywave in the local service area of AMs; there is practically no daytime skywave of significance anyway. Skywave today is a pest for larger AMs when the fringe service areas are subject, at night, to cancellation of groundwave and skywave meeting out of phase. This generally does not occur to the major AMs in NYC inside the MSA, anyway. And for any of the regional channel stations, it is irrelevant.
We are talking about commercial stations (and WBAI is on a commercial channel) and advertisers essentially do not target anyone over 55 on radio.
Ah, the convection current FM signal effect. Droll.
(Or are you making a muddled explanation of inversion layers on FM?)
And big trolls. They have a high resistance.
I would not believe anything that WBAI said about its own finances.
The AM skywave component is there and may be an advantage reaching between buildings as it is being received from a different angle. It would be difficult to study or measure this wave but you may see it on oscilloscope being slightly out of phase with the main signal due to it taking different path to the receiver. Think of 80 meters short wave during the day, it has a low altitude ionospheric skip and probably would not reach farther than the line of sight wave. .
That's another station that fades out in the far reaches of New Jersey. Thank you for the feedback. Perhaps in the future, new technology will correct this problem. (Like web radio. LOL) No really, people need to invent new stuff for this.
This will all be made possible when Congress repeals those pesky Laws of Physics.
Is this all your own material?
If it is, you should be writing scripts for The Simpsons.
How long are they going to keep bailing this thing out? Until there's an eviction notice on their transmitter???