Doing some digging around the FCC website, it appears a new station has applied to move to 107.9. But it won't be in Sacramento...
Yet-to-sign-on non-comm KCYF, licensed to Farms of Amador in beautiful Sutter Creek, has applied to move their station from the original 298 (the old KSAC frequency) to channel 300. According to the application, the station will co-locate with KGRB-FM and KVGC's 100w flamethrower xlator in Pine Grove (this site is apparently not available for use at channel 298. As their 298 site would have to be built from the ground-up further away from community of license, using 107.9 allows them to start broadcasting earlier from existing facilities...before their CP expires).
According to the application, it is entirely possible that the share-time station that KCYF will be operating in conjunction with could still broadcast on 298 during KCYF's off hours. The other time-share partner (Sonora Sierra Heritage Foundation) has their CP for 107.5 tied up with FAA and county red tape. They may not even make it on before their CP expires in November.
Assuming this is approved, it will certainly mean no full-powered station will return to 107.9 in Sacramento metro. That being said, despite being 40-50 miles away, KGRB and KVGC's translator booms out there.
What say you? I'm only an armchair engineer, but this makes me scratch my head. Unless there was a desire to move this station closer to Sacramento, why wouldn't they attempt to run a mildly directional antenna from the existing 94.3/96.5 tower at 107.5 instead of building a new site 3-4 miles east?
Next question is what would prevent them from plopping this signal in Sacramento as a commercial station down the road? Is there a FCC rule that prevents a station from changing its commercial status within a certain time of signing on?
Yet-to-sign-on non-comm KCYF, licensed to Farms of Amador in beautiful Sutter Creek, has applied to move their station from the original 298 (the old KSAC frequency) to channel 300. According to the application, the station will co-locate with KGRB-FM and KVGC's 100w flamethrower xlator in Pine Grove (this site is apparently not available for use at channel 298. As their 298 site would have to be built from the ground-up further away from community of license, using 107.9 allows them to start broadcasting earlier from existing facilities...before their CP expires).
According to the application, it is entirely possible that the share-time station that KCYF will be operating in conjunction with could still broadcast on 298 during KCYF's off hours. The other time-share partner (Sonora Sierra Heritage Foundation) has their CP for 107.5 tied up with FAA and county red tape. They may not even make it on before their CP expires in November.
Assuming this is approved, it will certainly mean no full-powered station will return to 107.9 in Sacramento metro. That being said, despite being 40-50 miles away, KGRB and KVGC's translator booms out there.
What say you? I'm only an armchair engineer, but this makes me scratch my head. Unless there was a desire to move this station closer to Sacramento, why wouldn't they attempt to run a mildly directional antenna from the existing 94.3/96.5 tower at 107.5 instead of building a new site 3-4 miles east?
Next question is what would prevent them from plopping this signal in Sacramento as a commercial station down the road? Is there a FCC rule that prevents a station from changing its commercial status within a certain time of signing on?