WNVR AM1030, has gotten a CP to boost their day power to 27kW, CH to 8kW and nights to .21kW.
During the day and during CH, they will be on six towers, at night 5 towers.
This really boosts their daytime range well out past Rockford, up to Milwaukee and close to
city grade out to Madison, it also improves their signal south into the city, from about Aurora
to just south of the Loop. This is only their 5mV coverage, their secondary coverage goes all
the way out to about the IL/IA border. It also extends them all the way past Kankakee and
Michigan City. It also slightly extends their signal at night, a little going north and south and
east, while nulling it a little more than now to the west.
It looks as if they will need to build 6 new towers for the upgrade. I may be wrong on that but the
current towers are electrically and physically short and top loaded. The new pattern calls for much
higher electrical length.
This is really going to give them a good signal.
I do have a question though, isn't unusual to get that kind of power increase so close to
50kW WMVP? The spacing of the two stations is not that far. Would this kind of upgrade be
allowed if WNVR was southeast of WMVP. I would think that if they built the site in the suburbs
and made it much more directional to the N/NW that they would have even stronger coverage
in the city. The new pattern also overlaps all of WLIP's city grade coverage, which is only
two ticks down the dial.
I was just kind of wondering what the rules were on that. A south suburban location would
most likely make their coverage at night more useful at well. They are 5 channels away from
1080 WNWI's Riverdale towers. Could they build south and have the same situation that WSCR
and WGN have, as well as WBBM, whose tower is only a matter of blocks from WGN?
Just thought I would ask, I'm not so great with the tech stuff.
http://www.radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/finder?call=wnvr&x=3&y=$&sr=Y&s=C
During the day and during CH, they will be on six towers, at night 5 towers.
This really boosts their daytime range well out past Rockford, up to Milwaukee and close to
city grade out to Madison, it also improves their signal south into the city, from about Aurora
to just south of the Loop. This is only their 5mV coverage, their secondary coverage goes all
the way out to about the IL/IA border. It also extends them all the way past Kankakee and
Michigan City. It also slightly extends their signal at night, a little going north and south and
east, while nulling it a little more than now to the west.
It looks as if they will need to build 6 new towers for the upgrade. I may be wrong on that but the
current towers are electrically and physically short and top loaded. The new pattern calls for much
higher electrical length.
This is really going to give them a good signal.
I do have a question though, isn't unusual to get that kind of power increase so close to
50kW WMVP? The spacing of the two stations is not that far. Would this kind of upgrade be
allowed if WNVR was southeast of WMVP. I would think that if they built the site in the suburbs
and made it much more directional to the N/NW that they would have even stronger coverage
in the city. The new pattern also overlaps all of WLIP's city grade coverage, which is only
two ticks down the dial.
I was just kind of wondering what the rules were on that. A south suburban location would
most likely make their coverage at night more useful at well. They are 5 channels away from
1080 WNWI's Riverdale towers. Could they build south and have the same situation that WSCR
and WGN have, as well as WBBM, whose tower is only a matter of blocks from WGN?
Just thought I would ask, I'm not so great with the tech stuff.
http://www.radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/finder?call=wnvr&x=3&y=$&sr=Y&s=C