How many daytime only stations are left?
Peter Murray
peterwmurray@gmail.com
Sat Jan 12 06:08:55 EST 2013
Why would that prevent the subsequent owner of 101.7 from granting the same
permission (in the case that 101.3 was part of the deal)?
Given the fill-in translator rules,. The power could be increased to as
much as 250w and it could be used as a HD2 or AM relay. CBS Radio is doing
something similar in Baltimore with 97.5 (relaying WWMX-HD2).
It seems like a short-sighted decision to turn it in, though considering
the losses Phoenix Media had with WFNX, it may just have been a cost to
maintain/operate they did not want.
-Peter
On Jan 12, 2013 1:25 AM, "Eli Polonsky" <elipolo@earthlink.net> wrote:
> >Date: Thu, 10 Jan 2013 08:21:16 -0800 (PST)
> >From: Sean Smyth <ssmyth@psualum.com>
> >Subject: Re: How many daytime only stations are left?
> >
> >I'm curious as to who might have ended up with 101.3
> >had the Phoenix not turned in the license.
>
> Probably nobody. If I'm correct, it was considered
> an unusable frequency with the one exception that
> WFNX gave permission for their own repeater to be
> second-adjacent to their main signal.
>
> EP
>
>
>
>
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