avtosalon said:
You have ignored the fact that Lake and McHenry County are completely gone from the new coverage map. Lake County is the third most populated county in the state, so EMF can forget about receiving any donations from these areas if this move happens, assuming the circle on the map is accurate.
Who cares? So, this station should ignore most of Cook, which has approximately 8 times the population of Lake County? That just doesn't make business sense. They can keep DuPage in the bag, too, which just so happens to be the
second most populated county.
Two other EMF nearby stations, 88.3 WCLR Arlington Heights (Air 1) and 105.3 WFZH Mukwonago, Wisconsin (K-Love) also do not reach Lake County. I also learned that they have a 10 watt translator at 96.7 in Park Ridge and a 5 watt translator at 94.3 in Joliet which do not go out very far.
There is nothing stopping EMF from applying for more translators in Lake or McHenry Counties, if they feel that strongly about filling that area.
The city of Chicago is a not a good demographic for the K-Love format. The city is very diverse, with many African Americans, Hispanics, Catholics, and other ethic groups that are not typical K-Love listeners, who are Protestant. Do you remember how poor the ratings were for 'The Fish'? Which is why that station is no longer here.
Several problems here. 1) Chicago does not equal Cook County 2) Cook County has over 8 times the population of Lake County -- Even with a highly skewed demographic, Cook still trumps Lake 3) The whole point is moot, because according to the existing 60dBu contour for WJKL, only the SW corner of Lake County is being served anyway 4) You lost me as soon as you mentioned The Fish. 106.7 The Fish
totally covered Lake and McHenry, even part of Kenosha and Walworth! And yet, the station disappeared. If Lake is such a perfect target demo, why didn't it save The Fish? Hmmm... Perhaps Salem had completely different plans for 106.7 than EMF does for 94.3?
Contour for 106.7 The Fish:
http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/FMTV-service-area?x=FM287983.html
There is a two-watt station on 100.7 from the Sears Tower that doesn't seem to have significant interference problems from 100.3 or 101.1
A totally irrelevant comparison because your example is only 2 watts, but the station we are talking about has applied for 3,500 watts. That's 1,750 times higher!
If 94.3 would not cause any interference to 93.9 and 94.7 as you claim, why is the station not transmitting from downtown presently?
In reverse, yes, an irrelevant comparison. But, the interference to 100.7 is minimal, even with HD Radio sidebands from 100.3 and 101.1 alongside it. It's an extreme but completely relevant comparison. For another comparison, try 107.9 WLEY-FM on for size. WLEY-FM has 21kW from a reasonably tall stick. It's coverage area thoroughly overlaps WGCI, but these two stations don't cause each other significant problems.
WJKL would be better off right where they are at now. Another thing, presently they have 6,000 watts, but the wattage on the appliaction is reduced to 3,500 watts.
You are ignoring HAAT. 3500 watts is not a downgrade when you raise the antenna from 328 to 440 feet.
Concerning the old vs. new coverage areas, the population density within the new contour is much greater. See all that white area within the left half of the existing 60dBu contour? Over 1/3 of the existing coverage area is cows and cornstalks.
Existing contour:
http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/FMTV-service-area?x=FM1186457.html
Now take a look at all the dense yellow in the new contour. Not much John Deere Green in that circle.
Application contour:
http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/FMTV-service-area?x=FM1245341.html
A highly un-intelligent move if you ask me, but I suspect the FCC might approve this because other suburban frequencies (96.7, 99.9, and 107.9) were allowed to move closer in.
A highly un-intelligent move? Well, if your listeners are bovine in nature, then yes. But, from a business perspective, it's a phenomenally intelligent decision that is being allowed all too often by the FCC.