> I always thought that was the best frequency in Rhode
> Island.One of the better night signals anyway.
> At night you lose WPRO and WHJJ south of East Greenwich.I
> always hear a Country station bleeding in on 920 no matter
> where I am at night. I never catch the calls though.
Perspective: Many years ago I was, at the same time, CE
and PD at 550 (when it was WXTR - "The Wonderful World
of Music".
Though the signal was good (more below), the biggest audience
problem (the format was reasonably hot at the time) was
getting people to twist the dial far enough to find it.
At that time there were lots of manual dialing radios. The
advantage belonged to WJAR, WLKW, WICE even WHIM, being right
in the middle of the dial (920, 990, 1290, 1110). WPRO
had an established audience going back to the days when there
were only about 4 stations in Providence. They held their
audience all those decades and, for most people marked the
very end of the dial. Still, for a year or so, the numbers
were very good. Especially in competition with WLKW which
went away at night.
It was clear from the earlier days of the 550 frequency as
WPAW that the Pawtucket/Blackstone Valley communities were
NOT interested in anything really local; they thought of themselves
as part of "Greater Providence" and favored Providence stations.
I'd be amazed if that has changed at all today.
The dial position gives the station the highest potential
for signal strength in Rhode Island. Even with the 1kW
days/500 Watts directional at night it was good but
could have been absolutely killer if it had been possible
to have the transmitter just South of providence rather
than just North.
But....
The potential was squandered when the then-owners declined to go
for the 5 kW signal that could have been done with a third tower.
It ceased to be possible when all the wetlands activisim sprouted.
From the programming perspective, another major mistake was failing
to bid on what was then WXCN, letting it go to WLKW, and then the
battle was lost.
I gotta admit, their logic at the time was sound though without
foresight. At that time the 5-kW would have required a third tower,
in line with the two. BUT, it would be 2-tower directional days;
3-tower, tighter pattern, nights. THAT would have required a First
Class Operator at all times; not cheap. Who could have foreseen
that The FCC would abandon that requirement within a very short time.
There were license mills grinding out First-Phones for combo
operators but the really good talent wasn't going that route.
Also, the then-owners had an offer of nearly 5-million from ABC
but turned it down, the station being a family legacy. It was
sold cheap not too many years later.
As far as technical issues....
I haven't been inside the building since about 1982. The equipment
was antiquated then but I've heard it has been somewhat upgraded.
The ground system was always problematic because the owner's father
kept (this is serious, not a joke) roto-tilling it up to plant
potatoes! I had to replace radials wholesale each fall when the
crop was in. If memory serves, the towers (pretty tall) were
constructed of tubing rather than rod-stock and if I were at all
interested in buying it I'd want a really thorough inspection.
Not just because of the cost of building new if needed; because
of the probable impossibility of getting city (Valley Falls) and
state, possibly Federal, wetlands permission even for exact
replacements. As to the 5-kW....pretty much forget about it for
the same reason. Plus, I think that when the owners walked away
from going 5-kW back in the day, WEDV up in Vermont got a power
increase that would have greatly added to the complexity of the
situation.
My guess is that without some major coup to boost power...and
given the state of AM in general...if Disney ever wants to sell
they won't have much of a bidding war.<P ID="signature">______________
Misanthropy:
Not just a hobby...a WAY OF LIFE!</P>