I drove by the new sight about 2 weeks ago. The transmitter shack is built, and all the posts are in place to start installing
the towers. They will have six towers total, 4 for the day, and 6 for at night. They are getting this site together very quickly.
The new location was a wooded area, next door to a factory. It was untouched until about February, when they went in and cut
down all the tree's, leveled the land, and started working very quickly. David is correct about the permit issue. They had all
the FCC permit's for some time, the problem they were having was with the city. The city dragged it's feet for quite some
time before finally granting them the permit's they needed to start building. Directly across the street from the site, on the
north side of the 127th street is a nice, all residential area, made up of single family homes. A lot of the residents were not
happy about the tower's going up directly across the street from them. I will be driving past there in the next day or two, I
will give you an update on how it looks.
I agree with Link about the IBOC, WRTO's signal sounds worse than any other HD AM in the city, IMHO. Their signal is so
bad at night that the buzz on the station at night is louder than the audio itself. When they broadcast in mono, their signal
was great. In fact I don't know how they were ever able to install IBOC at the current site. When they built the station in
the 1980's, they had so many tight nulls in their directional pattern, that they gave up on trying to install AM stereo.
WRTO used to be known WLXX, and had a tropical music format. I don't speak spanish, but, I really enjoyed the music
they played, I don't know how the station billed, however the rating's were better then they are now. They usually came
in very close to 1.0 share, that does not sound high, but they now sway back and forth between a 0.2 and 0.3.