[BC] Mono Expands on the FM Band

R J Carpenter rcarpen
Mon Jan 16 10:13:43 CST 2006


>From the DC-area radio/TV gossip site DCRTV.COM:
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Mono Returns To DC's FM Band - 1/16 - Mono is making a comeback on the 
DC area's FM band. Radio engineers have long known that a mono FM 
signal has more range than a stereo one does. In fringe areas, a 
stereo signal can feature an annoying hiss. The resurrection of mono 
arrived several years ago, when Bonneville's WTOP started an FM relay 
on Warrenton's 94.3, which got moved to 107.7. The mono signal 
improved coverage into the DC metro. And since the programming was 
news and talk, the loss of stereo didn't seem to matter to listeners. 
Then, Bonneville stripped stereo from its 104.1 and 103.9, two 
edge-of-the-metro area signals that carried "modern" music-based Z104. 
It improved the coverage area, but didn't seem to do a lot for the 
station's anemic ratings. Z104 was decapitated earlier this month. 
And, now, Bonneville is running WGMS in mono on 104.1 and 103.9. Will 
classical music fans appreciate Bach and Beethoven in a more "flatter" 
sounding mono? A quick check of the DC FM band finds several other 
stations broadcasting in mono, including the new WTOP news signal on 
103.5, WGMS's old home. Also in mono: CSPAN's wonk-talk WCSP 90.1, 
which battles closely-spaced Culpeper's Christian contemporary WPER 
89.9 in parts of Northern Virginia, and Mega's Spanish "classica" 
music rimshots of WBZS 92.7 in Prince Frederick and WBPS 94.3 in 
Warrenton. Still talking in stereo: NPR-based WAMU 88.5 and WETA-FM 
90.9.....
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... and what does this hint about the efficacy of IBOC?

bob carpenter 



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