A few years back a broadcast engineering consultant told me he does a lot of
work for AM stations designing small, low profile antenna systems. That way
they can stay on the air, probably while selling off those directional antenna
sites, and not have to write off the station from the corporate books, which
they would have to do if the station went off the air.
73 - Jim K8MR
-----Original Message-----
From: Charles Plunk <af4o@twc.com>
To: Rfi List <rfi@contesting.com>
Sent: Tue, Oct 26, 2021 11:01 am
Subject: Re: [RFI] Splatter from AM Radio Station WNTS Indianapolis and
Resolution
I am in a, lets say less than affluent, rural county in TN where one
would think maybe AM broadcast is still viable. When the lineman the
other day fixed one of my power line arc's, he stated "Your the only one
we get calls like this anymore since no one listens to AM radio
anymore". Very telling IMO.
Chuck
W4NBO
On 10/26/21 7:11 AM, Don Kirk wrote:
> sold the
> land because the land became more valuable than the station. It really is
> a sad situation.
>
>
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