ontheair247 said:
Back in the days there was one person running separate programming for two stations AM & FM. The cart machines where the Spotmaster type where you had to pull back the lever for the capstan motor to come up to speed at least a few seconds before punching to air. If the DJ/operator wowwed a cart on the air, Sir Richard would enter the control room and remove the fuses from all the cart decks except one, forcing the operator to segue from one cart to the next using one machine.
Definitely a few other "legendary" stories about the early history of that fine radio institution.
George K
Dick Hardin asked me to install a lever switch so only one cart machine could be
on the air at once time, you had to flip back and forth between machines.
The weather for WBJH was all on cart, you picked one for "today" another
for "tonight" and another for "tomorrow" and one for the temperature,
so it was a lot of work to play a forecast ! I think Phil Allen was the
voice ??
Speaking of hum ... the FM had AM in the background, and the FM just
had lots of hum ... since the 20,000 watt FM transmitter and 5,000 watt
AM transmitters were right in the FM studio. It was noisy and hot
in there.
Also ... the studio was built new in about 75 or 76, and they ran out of
money, so never installed either heat or air conditioning. One of the
kids that worked there pulled a fast one and called OSHA. I was there
when the inspector came in ... he looked around, mentioned that there
were some paint cans too close to the transmitter, a shaky ladder,
things like that. The kid asked about the heat and AC, and the inspector
said "they aren't required, people work outside don't they, if it
bothers you, find another job" and that was that.