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WLVI Sign On

I remember it too now that you mention it. Bert Kaempfert was a staple artist at many of the Beautiful music stations I worked for over the years....very well recorded music that had a great thumping bass line. It would be nice to hear "Red roses for a blue lady" on an FM stereo signal again. It always amazes me what people remember, I am somewhat the same when it comes to obscure information
 
While we're on this subject, did the music have any real purpose? A test pattern and tone are obvious, but why the music?
 
I was told back in the 70s that Advent used WJIB-FM as their source when working on their FM tuners because it had the best air chain in Boston.
 
NHRadio said:
While we're on this subject, did the music have any real purpose? A test pattern and tone are obvious, but why the music?

In Boston, Kaiser/Globe Broadcasting owned both WJIB and WKBG/WLVI (as well as WCAS in Cambridge). In the beginning, the music on Channel 56 during their test pattern periods was from the WJIB music library. They did it to check for tonal quality and to make sure the levels were proper for TV broadcast. Channel 56 generally signed-on after 11:00 AM back in the 60's and early 70's. Eventually, it just became a tradition to put 'JIB music on 56 at the beginning of the broadcast day.

Here's a little sample of WKBG/WLVI back in the day.....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXj0EHiA-X0
 
Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:
NHRadio said:
While we're on this subject, did the music have any real purpose? A test pattern and tone are obvious, but why the music?

In Boston, Kaiser/Globe Broadcasting owned both WJIB and WKBG/WLVI (as well as WCAS in Cambridge). In the beginning, the music on Channel 56 during their test pattern periods was from the WJIB music library. They did it to check for tonal quality and to make sure the levels were proper for TV broadcast. Channel 56 generally signed-on after 11:00 AM back in the 60's and early 70's. Eventually, it just became a tradition to put 'JIB music on 56 at the beginning of the broadcast day.
Is there anyone out there that has any video on the old WTAO-TV from the early 50's
Here's a little sample of WKBG/WLVI back in the day.....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXj0EHiA-X0
Is there anyone out there that has any video on the old WTAO-TV from the early 50's
 
chrish said:
Back in the day the WJIB audio was pretty much as good as it gets

WGBH-FM was about as good as it got as well. One night a week, an engineer from KLH audio, Victor Campos, would play a first-generation-from-the-master-tapes of symphonic music with virtually no limiting. I'm surprised the transmitter didn't go up in flames when they played "Also Sprach Zarathustra" performed by the by the Chicago Symphony Orchestra!
 
FRM-Yankey said:
Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:
NHRadio said:
While we're on this subject, did the music have any real purpose? A test pattern and tone are obvious, but why the music?

In Boston, Kaiser/Globe Broadcasting owned both WJIB and WKBG/WLVI (as well as WCAS in Cambridge). In the beginning, the music on Channel 56 during their test pattern periods was from the WJIB music library. They did it to check for tonal quality and to make sure the levels were proper for TV broadcast. Channel 56 generally signed-on after 11:00 AM back in the 60's and early 70's. Eventually, it just became a tradition to put 'JIB music on 56 at the beginning of the broadcast day.
Is there anyone out there that has any video on the old WTAO-TV from the early 50's
Here's a little sample of WKBG/WLVI back in the day.....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eXj0EHiA-X0
Is there anyone out there that has any video on the old WTAO-TV from the early 50's
I'm not even sure they were set up to make kinescopes!
 
WGBH sounded great when they had the GEL transmitters but no so great when the put the two Harris FM 25 K's in, they had notoriously bad sounding IPA sections and PA power supplies that severly degraded the audio when connected to a 208 WYE three phase connection. Could not handle the the harmonic content that has invaded modern day power especially a WYE connection. This connection often has has heavey harmonic content at 120 and 240 hertz spectrum which amost all transmitters only filter for the 360 and the DC looks a fright if you look at it on a low frequency specrum analyzer. The symptoms show up as a very washed out bass low end even though it proofs flat as a pancake. Spent 25 years of my career ridding stations of that awful AC power connection. With the installation of a closed delta feed the harmonics are trapped and circulate within the Delta and never enter the supply to begin with and low end richness was restored in every case. Its funny, in the front of every Harris transmitter manual it advises you to connect this transmitter to a closed Delta feed but few pay attention.
 
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