John Holcomb II said:Dean ONeal has been known to chime in, so perhaps he'll give insite.
what was 88.3 before WPOZ was on the signal?
so WMYZ and WHYZ were also stations that people didn't want?
I'm wondering which signal would penitrate The Villages? If not the translator which we use now, i was thinking perhaps WMYZ? I know they need to protect 88.1 WHIK/Ocala.
cd637299 said:I'm not Dean, but I think it debuted in 1993 or so as WEAZ with maybe 3 kW. I caught it as DX in south FL then....of course Miami now has its own 88.3 WGNK.
If the Ocala 88.1 isn't shut down, it'd have to be WMYZ 88.7 to upgrade, if it does. A member of RD mentioned 91.7 in Pierson (owned by the Z folk) coming on the air recently---with already a 91.7 in Gainesville, I doubt that it would be heard well in Ocala. With all the translators in Ocala, I'm sure that Z can get one, if they haven't already.
BTW there was WLMS 88.3 in Lecanto (Citrus County), but they were shut down so that Z can upgrade, IIRC. WLMS & WEAZ co-existed for awhile, right?
cd
w9wi said:88.3 was probably greatly limited by TV channel 6. (see FCC regulation 73.525)
Since channel 6 moved to a different frequency with the 2009 digital switchover, it's no longer susceptible to interference from 88.3. Indeed, WPOZ also needs to protect (or buy out) other stations at the bottom of the band. But those stations were also limited by channel 6 so there aren't all that many of them & they're not all that powerful either.
rbrucecarter5 said:I think they had a very close and amiable relationship with channel 6. I know a similar situation happened in the Houston area when KSBJ signed on at its original frequency of 88.1. There was a channel 6 in Beaumont, and they spent a lot of time mitigating interference complaints by channel 6 viewers. They could only upgrade by changing to 89.3. WPOZ is 200 kHz further away on 88.3, and I think they phase locked their frequency to channel 6 to help. TVs have gotten better since then as well, even the old NTSC sets used much better ceramic filters for audio than in the 80's. I noticed on a pledge drive they were trying to get on their own tower, I forget whether that was the old channel 6 tower or another tower that was abandoned.
John Holcomb II said:Yes they do broadcast from the channel 6 tower, I rememger seeing it when they were getting money for the upgrade.
They plan to move to the top of the tower.
Maybe what happens to all these translators is wait and see?
I dont think Orlando stations reach Palm Bey, so the 97.9 would still be needed to translate.
They are always live and local as I can see, except for Christmas day.
w9wi said:88.3 was probably greatly limited by TV channel 6. (see FCC regulation 73.525)
Since channel 6 moved to a different frequency with the 2009 digital switchover, it's no longer susceptible to interference from 88.3. Indeed, WPOZ also needs to protect (or buy out) other stations at the bottom of the band. But those stations were also limited by channel 6 so there aren't all that many of them & they're not all that powerful either.
John Holcomb II said:Yes they do broadcast from the channel 6 tower, I rememger seeing it when they were getting money for the upgrade.
They plan to move to the top of the tower.
wpio said:John Holcomb II said:Yes they do broadcast from the channel 6 tower, I rememger seeing it when they were getting money for the upgrade.
They plan to move to the top of the tower.
Plan? How so? Do you see an application filed to do that? Currently they're on a tower (I think about 4 miles) south of the Six tower. To move north and to utilize (the top, or any height) of the old Six tower, they'd have to reduce their power to protect 3rd adjacent WKTO. I could run a V-Soft map if there were need to prove what I'm saying.
wpio said:And there's a CP to move back to the two-miles-south tower. What do you make of that? I don't know what to make of it.