- Sep 9, 2003
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I lost track of this. Here in DC we have such a station that serves the hispanic community. I am just wondering if there is an end date for this or whether the FCC has decided to continue to allow their existence
Have you contacted the station? They are probably the best source for what their future plans are.I lost track of this. Here in DC we have such a station that serves the hispanic community. I am just wondering if there is an end date for this or whether the FCC has decided to continue to allow their existence
FCC website said:The FCC has established a new deadline for the termination of all analog operations by LPTV stations. That date is dependent upon the completion of the Commission’s incentive auction, which involves a repacking process that will displace some LPTV stations. Therefore, the Commission has determined to allow LPTV stations to wait until the incentive auction is complete before transitioning to digital. LPTV stations will have 12 months from the completion of the 39-month post-incentive auction transition (51 months from the completion of the incentive auction) to cease analog operations and begin operating in digital, at which point analog television will no longer exist in the United States.
If analog broadcast is prohibited in the TV band, it sort of stands to reason that FM will have to give them some guard room. While the bandwidth of FM is about 200kHz, they can't run it right up to 87.9MHz using the fact that the TV audio carrier was there under analog. If there is a channel 6 TV station, I would assume (perhaps incorrectly) that FM below 88.something would have to give way.This isa situation that affexts more than one station.
I'm betting it isn't even being contemplated at this point in time.In any event I was just hoping that someone might know the status of an FCC decision in this matter.
We have a sub-channel that carries FM music.
Not receivable on an FM radio but when you tune that channel.
Assigning RF6 to AM makes no sense as none of the equipment is set up to deal with the different band and its significantly different reception requirements. Since we're only talking about room for a handful stations, what's the point of getting all worked up? The concept of squatting isn't particularly acceptable anywhere else.The operators of these "Franken FM"stations are still trying to get the FCC to let them continue for a longer time (if not indefinitely) and those who want to turn 87.7 or the entire Ch. 6 space over to FM (with or without preference being given to AM operators) are lobbying against it.
I feel confident that we can restrict this discussion to US broadcasts and the band allocation therein.You may not realize some other parts of world use FM and digital radio DRM use 76 to 88 MHz band. And the old Soviet FM radio band was used in the old cold war days. You may not realize they used to send analog SECAM video in 88 to 108 MHz band!
We haven't seen the final word on the post-repack TV band yet. I would imagine that if a DTV or Next Gen channel came along and needed the channel, they might well get it.The switch to digital did not affect them---or at least has not affected them yet.