I think you are all constraining things by thinking it has to be the same basic facility. What is on cochannels and adjacent channels can, if necessary, use a DA which protects them.
In fact, if the station moves west, then there is an advantage to being directional towards the east, over Manhattan and Long Island. If far enough inland, a pattern that radiates very little towards those potentially protected adjacent channel stations pushes more power over the metro.I think you are all constraining things by thinking it has to be the same basic facility. What is on cochannels and adjacent channels can, if necessary, use a DA which protects them.
The best case for re-siting 1560 is creating the "same basic facility". WQXR/WFME had the same Maspeth facility for 60 years, and other stations have encroached on it since that time, like the cochannel daytimer on the Delmarva. Those other allocations must continue to be respected - or bought out as David suggested.I think you are all constraining things by thinking it has to be the same basic facility. What is on cochannels and adjacent channels can, if necessary, use a DA which protects them.
Then there's the additional question of whether Family Radio and the owner of the existing tower site can reach an agreement to return 1560 back to the air
I didn't mean the long-time WFME tower site in Maspeth, I meant the site where they might agree to diplex.Nope. That's been covered before. They had to pay the new site owner a lot of money to keep the station on through Monday. The station doesn't want to pay any more.
For a marginal station, a high power bill is significant. For a small market station it is. For major stations that are eligible for agency buys in NYC, power is much less of a factor than other and larger expense categories.It seems that every time someone mentions paying the electric bill as a factor in a station's being able to stay on the air, the notion is shot down by one of this forum's omniscient industry gurus and electricity costs are deemed irrelevant. Would this be the case with 1560?
It got COPPA’dIs there a copy of this video without the "dark screen" and playback controls on top? It's very difficult to see anything here, and someone's messages keep appearing at the top of the video!
They are moving out at old site .here a picture from Tom ray Facebook page
WhenTom said last month they'd move the transmitter "into storage for the time being." Gotta get off the land by the end of the week.
Towers will probably fall soon too. Watch for video!
Hi-I get WGLB out of Elm Grove WI. Although it's generally a poor signal, pointing my am loop antenna toward it for max gain, it comes in poor to fair and then fades in and out. Not really listenable (3 out of 10 at best) but it's there pretty much unopposed on 1560 since WFME went silent.Bob, what are you hearing on 1560 now in WFME's absence?
I think I also heard a country station (KLTI ?) coming in very faintly the other night when the WGLB signal deteriorated and there's maybe something else there with talk. Have no idea who they'd be, there's a few 1560's with with nighttime power less than 100 watts but no positive ID's yet.
The 50 kw KTNQ site in LA, shared with another 50 kw station, has a huge warehouse and industrial complex built under the towers and also under the elevated counterpoise ground system. There are many, many AM sites for 50 kw stations with business and residential areas surrounding them.It's interesting to see how close the WFME towers were located next to occupied workplaces. Most 50kw AM stations including those in the Meadowlands are still farther from people.
One exception is WABC with its tower literally in people's backyards in Lodi, NJ.
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How are these 50kw stations able to meet RF safety levels in such close proximity to homes and businesses? Haven't the regulations been tightened over the years, even as development has built up around the transmitter sites?
How are these 50kw stations able to meet RF safety levels in such close proximity to homes and businesses? Haven't the regulations been tightened over the years, even as development has built up around the transmitter sites?
The word "grandfathered" comes to mind.