R
RadioPhillyFan
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Why is the signal so strong? I can get it in Southern Chester County clearly.
Seltzer said:Grandfathered 100k
ka2xuk said:Seltzer said:Grandfathered 100k
No, neither WLEV nor its predecessor, WFMZ, ever ran that much power. When WFMZ first moved to South Mountain and its present frequency of 100.7, the ERP was 4,800 watts. It later went to 12.5 kW ERP and is now at about 11 kW, since the present tower is taller than the old one. But it never was a grandfathered superpower station. The only such station that I know of in Pennsylvania is WPEL in Montrose (Susquehanna County), which has an ERP of 57 kW on 96.5 MHz.
WFMZ/WLEV is short-spaced to three other Class B stations on 100.7: WZXL in Wildwood, NJ; WHUD in Peekskill, NY; and WZBA in Westminster, MD. That short spacing is what was grandfathered.
amfmsw said:OK, wait a minute. You're totally confused. TPO and ERP are completely different animals. Total Power Output at the antenna, the power levels you are quoting ka, are lowered from their licensed power limit because 1. the station uses multiple bays. or 2. is above the standard 500' ClassB antenna HAAT limit, or 3. is not a full ClassB, but a Class B1, like WZXL in Wildwood.
If the station exceeds the height limit, it must reduce power. If it uses multiple bays (like 6) for electical efficiency, it reduces power...BUT it's ERP (Effective Radiated Power) is still 50kw. WOGL is 9600watts...at 1100', BUT it's ERP is still the same as 50,000 watts.
amfmsw said:OK, wait a minute. You're totally confused. TPO and ERP are completely different animals. Total Power Output at the antenna, the power levels you are quoting ka, are lowered from their licensed power limit because 1. the station uses multiple bays. or 2. is above the standard 500' ClassB antenna HAAT limit, or 3. is not a full ClassB, but a Class B1, like WZXL in Wildwood.
ka2xuk said:I know all that. Take a look at the data on the FM Query page of the FCC Web site. They list ERP, not TPO, for the stations I mentioned. The ERP is decreased if the antenna height above average terrain is above 150 meters for a Class B station. It is only 50 kW if the antenna HAAT is at or below 150 meters. WLEV's antenna on South Mountain is at 327 meters and the FCC site shows 11 kW as the ERP, not the TPO. A license for an FM station will also show the ERP, rather than the TPO. The TPO would be whatever transmitter power is necessary to achieve the required ERP. ERP = TPO x (antenna gain - feedline loss)
ka2xuk said:But it never was a grandfathered superpower station. The only such station that I know of in Pennsylvania is WPEL in Montrose (Susquehanna County), which has an ERP of 57 kW on 96.5 MHz.