[BC] Radio Silence

Bob Tarsio Bob
Sat Apr 21 11:18:46 CDT 2007


Rich:

This is one of those times when I will blow our company's horn. We
manufacture a couple of solutions that sense silence and switch to a back up
path. Our AES-302 for digital silence and our CDS-302 for composite base
band silence. Even if there is no back up path we have applications notes on
our web site on how to create one using a simple consumer DVD player
connected to one of our units so that when the audio from the studio fails
our unit kicks in. Playing MP3s from a DVD player may not be as good as so
called live programming but it sure beats being off the air for the better
part of a weekend. 

Station engineers can visit our Tech Talk page for a number of cost
effective back up audio solutions at
http://www.broadcast-devices.com/techtalk.htm

I hope all had a great NAB. Thanks to all who visited us at Broadcasters
General Store and ERI. 

Regards, 

Bob Tarsio
President
 
www.Broadcast-Devices.com



-----Original Message-----
From: broadcast-bounces at radiolists.net
[mailto:broadcast-bounces at radiolists.net] On Behalf Of Rich Wood
Sent: Saturday, April 21, 2007 11:27
To: broadcast at radiolists.net
Subject: [BC] Radio Silence

------ At 09:37 AM 4/21/2007, RichardBJohnson at comcast.net wrote: -------

>In New England many stations don't even know if they are on-the-air. 
>Last Sunday morning I hit WCRB  (99.5 MHz on my truck radio. There 
>was no audio from 9:00 AM through 12:15 PM. The audio probably 
>failed before that. The radio station didn't answer their telephone 
>either. Now, I may be naive. I thought that if a STL failed, the 
>transmitter was required to be off-the-air. I guess it's okay to 
>have three hours of dead air nowadays. Nobody is watching.

I believe the requirement for a fail-safe system has been dropped.

Remember that this isn't the old Charles River WCRB. You'd remember 
it as WLLH-FM, then WSSH, then WOAZ, then WKLB before adopting the 
WCRB call and programming last year. It's licensed to Lowell, MA. 
about 25 miles Northwest of the city. The transmitter site appears to 
be near the junction of RT 93 and 495. Unless things have changed 
since I programmed WJIB, Boston, and had WSSH as a competitor, their 
signal was weak in most of the city.

Silence happens all the time with digital. I think WCRB is now the 
only full-time Classical station in greater Boston. Under Charles 
River, WCRB was locally programmed and fed sister station WFCC on 
Cape Cod. I believe the new WCRB is automated and satellite fed. It 
would be a shame if the "I don't have time to deal with it" attitude 
people have with digital spreads to major market analog.

I'll bet Alex Tanger's Beethoven.com got a lot of hits during that 
silent period.

Rich  

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