JerseyShor said:Is there anywhere to find a list of stations running IBOC at −10dBc?
Thank you,I couldn't remember how to spell it.Bill Wolfenbarger said:tertiary
Be thankful they relinquished the 470KW they had 40+ years ago.local oscillator said:Actually, what I was trying to say is that WBCT isn't allowed to increase to -10dBc due to its grandfathered status, but it is allowed to run its IBOC at -20dBc referenced to its grandfathered facilities. -20dBc referenced to 320kW/238m is the same as -8dBc referenced to 50kW/150m. WBCT's facilities exceed maximum Class B facilities by 12 dB. A non-grandfathered Class B with 238m HAAT would need to reduce power to 20kW; WBCT runs 320kW.
Well stated Savage. Radio was cool--and the sound from the air monitor was far superior to that of AM HD--and it took less spectrum to do it. Technical matters aside, there was a connection between the listener and the guy (or gal) in the air chair. That connection simply can't exist when the satellite is flipped on and the last person leaves the building at 5. Radio had the proverbial tiger by the tail and voluntarily let go of it simply because it was temporarily more profitable to do so. Why would a listener do something just because a hard drive told them to? At least my iPod listens when I ask it to play something.Savage said:BOTJ, I also started in radio in 1967 - as it happened, on my 17th birthday (April 16th.) And indeed, all the equipment was tube-type (Gates SA-40 console, BC-1J 1kw transmitter, CB-77 turntables, etc.) with music on records and live DJs. And radio WAS fun.
But the best part: everybody listened. There was no such thing as an advertiser "who didn't get results." Now that's a not-infrequent complaint about #1-rated stations.