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Re: Re: Re: Expanded band query...?
I know just enough to be dangerous!
<G>
-Paul Hopfgarten
-Derry NH
dan.strassberg@att.net wrote:
> The AM band was extended from 1500 to 1600 on, I
believe, March 31 1941, the effective date of NARBA, the
North American Regional Broadcast Agreement, which
caused the majority of the (then approximately 800) AM
stations in the US, Canada, and Mexico to change
frequencies. (Stations from 720 kHz--kcps, then--were
not affected.) Most, though hardly all, of the frequency
changes were upward shifts of 40 kHz or less.
I don't know when the US AM band was extended downward
to 540 kHz. It may have been as late as the 60s. 530 kHz
was added even later in Canada and other parts of the
Western Hemisphere (for example, Turks and Caicos
Islands in the Carribean). The US uses 530 only for
TISs. The other US TIS frequencies are mostly in the
area of 1610 to 1630 and I don't know when those first
came into use.
Through one of those weird FCC compromises that closes
its eyes to the facts, expanded-band stations, which
were originally supposed to be assigned from 1610 to
1700 were restricted to 1620 to 1700--except for one
station on 1610 in, I think, Texas.
> Don:
>
> The expanded AM band is from 1610-1700 kHz.
>
> 1540 in Albany is part of the AM band (550-1600 kHz) which has been unchanged
> since at least the 1940's (if not earlier).
>
> -Paul Hopfgarten
> -Derry NH
>
>
> Don Saklad wrote:
> > WPTR-AM 1540 kHz ?...
> http://www.google.com/search?q=wptr+1540
>