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I've been wondering why 'FNX never started broadcasting on HD. Any ideas? Tech issues? Plans for the future?
Eli Polonsky said:I have heard that not only the HD equipment is quite expensive, but so is the required license. Many small independent stations do not feel that it's worth the expense.
Aside from the transmitter, aren't those figures YEARLY recurring costs? And unless it has changed in the past couple of years, a license to cover a metro-survey area like Boston would cost a lot more than $25k.Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:It's about $100,000 to buy the transmitter alone. The license is $25,000 for the first stream, $5,000 for any further stream there after.
reelyreal said:Most likely a cost vs. benefit issue. I can't think of many small groups that adopted HD radio (outside of WCCC and WCCC-FM Hartford... They launched in 2005 but the HD is now off on both signals.)
MarcB said:reelyreal said:Most likely a cost vs. benefit issue. I can't think of many small groups that adopted HD radio (outside of WCCC and WCCC-FM Hartford... They launched in 2005 but the HD is now off on both signals.)
Red Wolf Broadcasting. WMRQ 104.1 Waterbury, CT. Previous owner CC put the station in HD. Then Red Wolf Broadcasting add HD 2 and HD 3. HD 2 is Spanish Tropical La Bomba, which is simulcast on a 97.1 translator. And when the HD 3 was on the air it was simulcasting a CCM station from Worcester, Mass.
probboy said:Since WFNX is licensed at 1700 watts analog, their HD signal could be at most 68 watts (4%). That's not going to get them a whole lot of digital coverage, and would degrade their (already weak) signal at the edge.
JIBGUY said:Aside from the transmitter, aren't those figures YEARLY recurring costs? And unless it has changed in the past couple of years, a license to cover a metro-survey area like Boston would cost a lot more than $25k.Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:It's about $100,000 to buy the transmitter alone. The license is $25,000 for the first stream, $5,000 for any further stream there after.
SixtiesGuy said:Seriously, how many non-radio industry people even know what HD radio is, let alone own one? It is the 21st Century equivalent of AM stereo, although in fairness AM stereo was actually receivable more than five miles from the transmitter. Why invest in dead technology?
4CX1000A said:probboy said:Since WFNX is licensed at 1700 watts analog, their HD signal could be at most 68 watts (4%). That's not going to get them a whole lot of digital coverage, and would degrade their (already weak) signal at the edge.
WERS is already running HD from the same site. Their coverage would be a good indication of what WFNX might expect.