[BC] Changing channels
Bailey, Scott
SBailey
Fri Feb 24 10:36:55 CST 2006
Peter,
Not to get off track of subject here, but from what everybody says
here on the list, vs. what I was told by my Comm. Attorney, example:
I'm on 1560, a Class D, daytimer, and I want to got to 1340, a Class C
channel, and use just 250 watts around the clock, fulltime, and I prove
to the commission this would work in my application, would this be a
minor or major change? I'm thinking it's a major change, and you have to
go through all the B.S. of that filling window and auction process. If
that's the case, it's not worth the headaches and wasting money!
Someone here on the list said if I wanted to move to 1540,1550,1570 or
1580, that would be a minor change. I tend to disagree, because that's
what my I was told, by who is suppose to know in DC!
Scott
-----Original Message-----
From: broadcast-bounces at radiolists.net
[mailto:broadcast-bounces at radiolists.net] On Behalf Of PeterH5322
Sent: Friday, February 24, 2006 10:26 AM
To: Broadcasters' Mailing List
Subject: RE: [BC] Changing channels
>What is Dial-a-power?
It's a euphemism for selecting any power which makes you station work
under the new rules.
Before the rules changes in the 80s, power could only be:
Class A: 50 kW, unless grandfathered at 10 kW,
Class B: 0.25, 0.5, 1, 5, 10, 25 or 50 kW (2.5 kW was added in the late
60s as Canada and Mexico had been using this power for years; 0.5 kW min
and 5 kW max for regionals, until "Rio"),
Class C: 0.25, 0.5 or 1 kW (0.1 kW was formerly allowed, and some are
still grandfathered at 0.1 kW, but on a regional channel), and
Class D: Same as Class B.
Stability of transmitters was certainly one concern.
Sadly, there were a great many Class Bs on regional channels which could
have been licensed at 0.25 kW, but could not meet the 0.5 kW minimum
without a DA.
(I know of one station which went from a 1 kW daytimer on 980 to a 1 kW
fulltimer on 1240 to a fulltimer on 980, but with 1 kW days and 0.25 kW
nights, all over four decades, or so, and all using the same stick. I
also know of a fulltimer on 1280 which went from 1/0.5 kW DA-N to 1/0.25
kW ND-U, but because it installed a 225 degree stick at one point, the
current power is 0.5/0.25 kW ND-U).
After all this, any power which met the minimum, but did not exceed the
maximum was permissible, and this often permitted upgrades which were
economically impossible under the old rules.
Example: ex-KRLA, Pasadena, now runs 20 kW nights into what is
essentially its 1940's array design, since relocated to Irwindale from
Whittier Narrows. But as there were only 10 and 25 kW as options then,
10
kW had to be selected, as there was no allowable power between 10 and
25.
With dial-a-power any value which maintained protection of the Class A
was acceptable, and 20 kW did the job. Which means that 20 kW could have
been possible from 1947 (or whenever this station became a Class II-B)
until the 80s when the newly moved array was built.
Dial-a-power certainly faciliates "ratcheting".
Imagine a forced move of a Class A, where ratcheting would require a 50
kW-er to reduce to 25 kW, the next lower increment under the old rules.
In that hypothetical, if 44 kW met the ratcheting rule, then that would
be the new power, not a reduction all the way down to 25 kW.
There are a couple of Class As which have alternate antennas which are
limited to 35 kW, not 50 kW, on account of the different vertical field
performance characteristics of their alternate antennas.
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