I'am old enough to remember when 95.5 was WNGC in Athens,then Southern Broadcasting bought it and moved it to 106.1 and sold 95.5 to Cox,and the beat was born.
I'm sure Cap'n Herb has messed a few up along the way, but every time I've heard him he had it right.Neil Millman said:Here are some observations:
Someone needs to tell Captain Herb that he can mentioned WSB AM/FM. Every report I heard this morning he said "News Talk 750 WSB." Either that or maybe he isn't doing team traffic and he has gone rogue.
Something to ponder, if WSB-FM is a sustained success, what will Cox do with WSB-AM?
jabba17 said:Cox will likely keep WSB AM as is...there are still some people with AM-only radios and a class A clear is still quite valuable.
Neil Millman said:Something to ponder, if WSB-FM is a sustained success, what will Cox do with WSB-AM?
gr8oldies said:Interesting that they wouldn't have had Capt. herb drill "AM 750 and NOW 95.5, Newstalk WSB" in his reports...
If The NEW 97.1 The River is any indication, you're probably right. River's going on, what, 6 years now?gr8oldies said:BTW, if WSB Jr.-WHIO- in Dayton is any indication, it will still be "NOW 95.5 FM for years"
Talk_Dude said:They could even milk it as a publicity stunt. Better yet, they could trade those people new radios for their old AM-only radios, and sell the AM-only radios to a museum or put them on Antiques Roadshow.jabba17 said:Cox will likely keep WSB AM as is...there are still some people with AM-only radios and a class A clear is still quite valuable.
jabba17 said:Talk_Dude said:They could even milk it as a publicity stunt. Better yet, they could trade those people new radios for their old AM-only radios, and sell the AM-only radios to a museum or put them on Antiques Roadshow.jabba17 said:Cox will likely keep WSB AM as is...there are still some people with AM-only radios and a class A clear is still quite valuable.
That's not a bad idea gimmick-wise, and could be a real poke in the eye to WGST.
jabba17 said:Can WSB split their airchain into separate AM and FM feeds to provide processing optimized for AM and FM, or do they have to try and find a happy medium or sacrifice one band's processing for the other? I ought to tune in AM and see if it sounds "worse".
amos said:Talk_Dude said:there's nothing in the world that is so interesting to listen to that it could make up for the terrible audio quality of AM radio, at least to my ears.
no matter how much we talk about the programming on SB, the fact remains that a LOT of the listeners feel EXACTLY the same way as Talk_Dude.
I like AM. I am happy that WSB has been SO successful for all these years. But there are just too many people that will NEVER listen to AM no matter what the programming.
Once upon a time WSB cancelled Ludlow Porch and put on David Paul to get a younger audience. The die-hards thought it was blasphemy, but it worked. where would they be today if they hadn't evolved?
it's not programming this time. the medium is the message. mr mcluhan taught us that.
maybe it's not time to move WSB to fm yet, but it will be one day. sooner than you think.
-amos
Note to Caller10, he was just kidding. They won't take away your 98.5 minutes of music every morning.Ken said:What is Cox's best FM signal that covers Atlanta? As was 95.5 the best choice to flip to News/Talk. I could have seen them use 98.5 instead plus already uses WSB-FM calls.
tlyle said:DavidEduardo said:GRS86 said:I'm not an engineer, but I wonder has Cox's engineering team ever given any thought to moving the AM 750 transmitter out of the strip shopping center across from Northlake to a marshy or swampy area somewhere in the general vicinity that would be a lot more conducive for the ground conductivity that a 50K watt AM signal needs.
This is not about coverage, it's about the age of listeners and sales.
With the right ground conductivity, WSB's daytime ground signal could easily cover a 250 - 300 mile radius much like WGN in Chicago, or WLW in Cincinnati does now.
The conductiviy of N. Ga. is terrible. No matter how damp the site itself is, the ground conductivity, like that around WSM, will not permit the same kind of coverage that a station like WGN gets in the high conductivity area that surrounds it.
WSB's nighttime signal isn't an issue, considering that it covers 38 states and parts of Canada.
Most AM listening is in the daytime hours, and most ad sales are in that time period. And with the interference on 750, and the protection now in effect, the reliable skywave coverage is perhaps 400-500 miles around. Of course, the 100 kw station in Venezuela does not help, nor does all the junk on 740 from the Caribbean, Mexico, etc.
Since radio is bought locally, the local Atlanta metro is what matters. There is really no significant revenue to be gotten from outside that area.
Part of the reason why the Braves became America's team was because of TBS going to cable nationally and WSB being able to air the games at night on the 50K Blowtorch of the south. I lived in another state and would tune into WSB just to hear the Braves play. There are many other Braves fans in other states who can't hear the Braves on radio anymore because their local stations are not in the Braves' network. For many years, WSB got revenue from night airing of Braves games.
Neil Millman said:Note to Caller10, he was just kidding. They won't take away your 98.5 minutes of music every morning.Ken said:What is Cox's best FM signal that covers Atlanta? As was 95.5 the best choice to flip to News/Talk. I could have seen them use 98.5 instead plus already uses WSB-FM calls.
GRS86 said:Used to listen to Braves games on WSB on the way home from work during my stint in suburban Detroit back in the mid 80's. Outside of the bleed over from WJR 760 in Detroit, WSB came in reliably clear at night. Of course, that part of the country was really great when it came to listening to baseball on the radio...
BRENT said:Question-----What is IBOC?