The Superadios that only go to 1600 were more sensitive than the newer ones that go to 1700. Shame...the first batch of SR's were awesome.
BobOnTheJob said:The Superadios that only go to 1600 were more sensitive than the newer ones that go to 1700. Shame...the first batch of SR's were awesome.
he even goes in everynight and puts the transmitter to bed before he calls it a day, and then gets up in the morning and checks on it (wakes the site up) before heading out.
(WLW has 3 full power transmitters available for air 2 solid state rigs and one tube)
CleanAudio said:I am told you could eat off the floor in the WLW transmitter room,
CleanAudio said:All, I checked with a good friend at CC Cincinnati on this entire thread, the posts on this could not be any further from correct. CC Cincy has a dedicated full time engineer that handles all of the transmitter sites in the market (AM and FM), he lives at the WLW site and I am told you could eat off the floor in the WLW transmitter room, takes care of the site completely including keeping the landscape up to code for the city of Mason, he even goes in everynight and puts the transmitter to bed before he calls it a day, and then gets up in the morning and checks on it (wakes the site up) before heading out. At 700 The blips on and off were related to the HD transmission gear having issues causing transmitter muting on the main. (WLW has 3 full power transmitters available for air 2 solid state rigs and one tube) When 550 was off the air it was a planned outage to work on the antenna system, CC corporate engineering was in to help. I think you will find that all though many people complain about CC there engineering is very top shelf, they acutally have the ability to repair gear and get capital to add new gear as technology advances (even in small markets).
secondchoice said:sorry about the incomplete post, If WLW is running HD could an errant 100% peak messing up the HD and confusing the silence detector?
The fan speaks the truth...you couldn't pay me enough to be a PD.Bengalsfan said:secondchoice said:sorry about the incomplete post, If WLW is running HD could an errant 100% peak messing up the HD and confusing the silence detector?
silence detectors normally don't turn a transmitter off. They call the engineer at 3am when the PD forgot to take a pause out of the log!
BobOnTheJob said:The fan speaks the truth...you couldn't pay me enough to be a PD.Bengalsfan said:secondchoice said:sorry about the incomplete post, If WLW is running HD could an errant 100% peak messing up the HD and confusing the silence detector?
silence detectors normally don't turn a transmitter off. They call the engineer at 3am when the PD forgot to take a pause out of the log!
Bengalsfan said:BobOnTheJob said:The fan speaks the truth...you couldn't pay me enough to be a PD.Bengalsfan said:secondchoice said:sorry about the incomplete post, If WLW is running HD could an errant 100% peak messing up the HD and confusing the silence detector?
silence detectors normally don't turn a transmitter off. They call the engineer at 3am when the PD forgot to take a pause out of the log!
I found the errant silence sensor calling me and it's been disabled. This engineer does not take calls from PDs mistakes.
CleanAudio said:All, I checked with a good friend at CC Cincinnati on this entire thread, the posts on this could not be any further from correct. CC Cincy has a dedicated full time engineer that handles all of the transmitter sites in the market (AM and FM), he lives at the WLW site and I am told you could eat off the floor in the WLW transmitter room, takes care of the site completely including keeping the landscape up to code for the city of Mason, he even goes in everynight and puts the transmitter to bed before he calls it a day, and then gets up in the morning and checks on it (wakes the site up) before heading out. At 700 The blips on and off were related to the HD transmission gear having issues causing transmitter muting on the main. (WLW has 3 full power transmitters available for air 2 solid state rigs and one tube) When 550 was off the air it was a planned outage to work on the antenna system, CC corporate engineering was in to help. I think you will find that all though many people complain about CC there engineering is very top shelf, they acutally have the ability to repair gear and get capital to add new gear as technology advances (even in small markets).
OKCRadioGuy said:"Well, in our "call chain" the Chief is on the list, near the bottom. In our group, if he didn't take the calls, we'd be looking for a new chief or contract chief.... "
Silence sensors, if possible, should only go to those that are responsible for them. That's programming. The transmitter drops off, that should go to the guy that handles that part of the deal. Engineering isn't usually included in programming so why should they take their screw ups? Likewise, most programming people can't even find their transmitter site so why should they get the transmitter alarm?