Varulven said:
OK, at $300,000.00 per year tower rental fee (and another quarter of a mill in electric fees), it begs the question:
1)Length of the contract with said Tower
2)Ability to find a less expensive nut to crack - AmericanRadioTowers, Dodge Radio Towers, whatever
the former owner of WRKO calls his Tower Company
It would be a tough call to find another tower site for 1510 that would fit its technical needs. The present site is a directional four-tower array located on land owned by the Waverly Oaks Office Park off of Route 60 at the Waltham/Belmont line. It has three different directional patterns. One for daytime, one for nighttime, and one for "critical hours", the two hours before sunset and after dawn.
It has to be situated where it can put an adequate signal over the City of Boston (and the suburbs within 128) without going much outside of 128, especially on night pattern. It has to protect frequencies in Canada and Tennesee at night, among others. Because it's a directional AM, it can't be placed on a building in the city or put on one tall tower like an FM station. The multi-tower array has to be built on soil with good conductivity, outside of the city with a directional pattern beamed at the city while protecting other stations in the necessary outlying directions, and the towers have to be certain heights to match a certain fraction of the wavelength of the station. It also has to be far enough to avoid interfering with towers of other local stations, and to avoid causing radio interference in the local area. When the present 1510 site was built in the early 80's, they had to spend millions on trying to eliminate interference problems to residents and companies in the Waltham and Belmont areas.
The location (Burlington) where WRKO's towers are may possibly work, but the RKO towers themselves wouldn't. They'd have to build a new site. And even if that was possible, I'm not sure if 1510 would put a strong enough signal over all of Boston from up there. Then, there's also the issue of finding a community willing to accept a multi-tower array being built in their area nowadays. It took Clear Channel over half a decade to convince Newton to go for the new 1200 towers. Someone like Dan Strassberg would know more about what options might possibly be technically available for a new site for 1510, but I recall the discussion coming up before, and hypothetical prospects that could meet all the necessary conditions looked pretty bleak.
Varulven said:
3)If ATC has a vested interest in other signals using their towers do they up the price for THE ZONE (kind of like Whitey Bulger "protection" to make things cost prohibitive for 1510), or was $25,000.00 per month the lowest fee 1510 AM could find?
I think it was because they had to build their own site to serve their particular technical needs, and that was the only workable place they could find to build it.
Varulven said:
4)At that rate, why stick with Sports radio. Can they possibly be meeting payroll, office, electric and tower fees with the business they are running?
A national company like Sporting News Radio may be able to keep it afloat if they have other profitable properties and businesses elsewhere, but they're probably taking a big loss on 1510. With no local programming, I'm sure they're running it as a skeleton operation with the lowest payroll and office expenses possible. The company has sold other underperforming stations elsewhere. Perhaps no one else has been willing to buy the 1510 albatross.
Varulven said:
I say bring back the real spirit of WMEX. Arnie Woo Woo piped in from Maine. Something creative on AM radio. You can't even broker time with that kind of expenses, unless it goes out at 500.00 per hour...
I'd love to hear it, but it wouldn't be a financial success. There reportedly have been people interested in reviving 1510 as WMEX-AM with a "Real Oldies" format, but the extremely high overhead and operating costs, plus the ratings failures of other "revivals" of heritage AM Top 40 stations as "Real Oldies" elsewhere (WWKB Buffalo, WSAI Cincinnati, etc...) have discouraged all interest.