About 18 years ago, I was a board operator and commericals/public service announcements producer at a small FM station. It really was a dream job…I lived at home half a block away, and had always been completely fascinated by broadcasting. Getting to work for two years in a radio station really was a highlight of life.
My technical knowledge is admittedly limited, but I do try to understand things. Now that I’ve learned a bit about FTA, I keep thinking about working in radio where I first learned that term “birds”. We got a new satellite receiver one day, and the engineer installed it and gave me a really quick rundown of what buttons/settings I needed to do for the Saturday night oldies show. That show was Dick Bartley’s Rock & Roll’s Greatest Hits, which ran from 1900 to 0000.
I still drive by the station, which is still in operation albeit under different ownership with a different format, and there are two C band dishes in the back yard. I got to wondering if I could figure out whether Dick Bartley’s show is still on, and if it is still distributed through satellite, and if it is still on the bird, which bird and is it scrambled.
Google has yielded some results.
Dick Bartley’s shows are distributed by United Stations Radio Networks (USRN).
USRN tech support pages suggest usage of birds AMC-8 at 139 degrees, and AMC-1 at 103 degrees, under Clear Channel Satellite Services. From here in Pennsylvania, 139 degrees would be below the horizon, so that leaves 103.
USRN Network Operations gives this satellite info.
X-Digital Carrier (All USRN programming except Starguide)
Frequency: 1026380 kHz
Symbol Rate: 5787234 sps
Receivers: USRN-owned XDS-Pro 1 or XDS-Pro 4
Program your X-Digital receiver here!
Starguide Carrier (Bloomberg, Peter Greenberg)
Frequency: 1017800 kHz
Data Rate: 06912000 bps
Symbol Rate: 5655272 sps
Provider: Clear Channel
Receivers: Starguide III, XDS-Pro 1-SG, or XDS-Pro 4-SG
So, I conclude that this programming is not available without the proprietary equipment. Anyone here a broadcast engineer who can confirm? And I am totally not attempting to circumvent anything or bring up any question of hacking. Just curious...I'd love to listen to that show again but it's not on any stations in my area.
My technical knowledge is admittedly limited, but I do try to understand things. Now that I’ve learned a bit about FTA, I keep thinking about working in radio where I first learned that term “birds”. We got a new satellite receiver one day, and the engineer installed it and gave me a really quick rundown of what buttons/settings I needed to do for the Saturday night oldies show. That show was Dick Bartley’s Rock & Roll’s Greatest Hits, which ran from 1900 to 0000.
I still drive by the station, which is still in operation albeit under different ownership with a different format, and there are two C band dishes in the back yard. I got to wondering if I could figure out whether Dick Bartley’s show is still on, and if it is still distributed through satellite, and if it is still on the bird, which bird and is it scrambled.
Google has yielded some results.
Dick Bartley’s shows are distributed by United Stations Radio Networks (USRN).
USRN tech support pages suggest usage of birds AMC-8 at 139 degrees, and AMC-1 at 103 degrees, under Clear Channel Satellite Services. From here in Pennsylvania, 139 degrees would be below the horizon, so that leaves 103.
USRN Network Operations gives this satellite info.
X-Digital Carrier (All USRN programming except Starguide)
Frequency: 1026380 kHz
Symbol Rate: 5787234 sps
Receivers: USRN-owned XDS-Pro 1 or XDS-Pro 4
Program your X-Digital receiver here!
Starguide Carrier (Bloomberg, Peter Greenberg)
Frequency: 1017800 kHz
Data Rate: 06912000 bps
Symbol Rate: 5655272 sps
Provider: Clear Channel
Receivers: Starguide III, XDS-Pro 1-SG, or XDS-Pro 4-SG
So, I conclude that this programming is not available without the proprietary equipment. Anyone here a broadcast engineer who can confirm? And I am totally not attempting to circumvent anything or bring up any question of hacking. Just curious...I'd love to listen to that show again but it's not on any stations in my area.