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#1
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![]() "David" wrote in message ... Nobody listens to AM radio anymore. What a waste of money. Does this mean KFI can go to 100 kW? This station is a special situation. It's most likely beamed toward Cuba, and meant only for their listening. You can bet a LOT of folks in Cuba still listen to AM radio, since it's reasonably easy to get Florida stations (when the jammers aren't going... that is.. ergo the need to have a 100KW signal). |
#2
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"Brenda Ann" wrote in message
... "David" wrote in message ... Nobody listens to AM radio anymore. What a waste of money. Does this mean KFI can go to 100 kW? This station is a special situation. It's most likely beamed toward Cuba, and meant only for their listening. You can bet a LOT of folks in Cuba still listen to AM radio, since it's reasonably easy to get Florida stations (when the jammers aren't going... that is.. ergo the need to have a 100KW signal). Also, Cuba has a really handy thing on medium wave AM radio -- Radio Reloj (Clock Radio), with time signals every second and the time announced every minute. (And newscasts which you can ignore, underneath the time ticks.) One of the odder items in my QSL album is a Radio Reloj bumper sticker. Yes, Cuba has bumper stickers, or did in the late 1980s when I was collecting QSLs actively. |
#3
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Brenda Ann wrote:
"David" wrote in message ... Nobody listens to AM radio anymore. What a waste of money. Does this mean KFI can go to 100 kW? This station is a special situation. It's most likely beamed toward Cuba, and meant only for their listening. You can bet a LOT of folks in Cuba still listen to AM radio, since it's reasonably easy to get Florida stations (when the jammers aren't going... that is.. ergo the need to have a 100KW signal). You can get FL FM in Cuba, can't you? I suspect the Cubanos listen to pop twaddle as much as anyone else and have little use for muddy old AM. Jammers aren't necessary. Just make sure they get lots of cheap dimmers. That's an AM radio killer. |
#4
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![]() "David" wrote in message ... You can get FL FM in Cuba, can't you? I suspect the Cubanos listen to pop twaddle as much as anyone else and have little use for muddy old AM. Cuba has FM... all stations are run by the goverment, and FM is not a budget priority. Most resorces go to AM programming. Many parts of Cuba can not get FM at all due to terrain, and the limited power and number of domestic FMs. |
#5
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In article ,
David wrote: Brenda Ann wrote: "David" wrote in message ... Nobody listens to AM radio anymore. What a waste of money. Does this mean KFI can go to 100 kW? This station is a special situation. It's most likely beamed toward Cuba, and meant only for their listening. You can bet a LOT of folks in Cuba still listen to AM radio, since it's reasonably easy to get Florida stations (when the jammers aren't going... that is.. ergo the need to have a 100KW signal). You can get FL FM in Cuba, can't you? I suspect the Cubanos listen to pop twaddle as much as anyone else and have little use for muddy old AM. Jammers aren't necessary. Just make sure they get lots of cheap dimmers. That's an AM radio killer. I think you are on to something there. You should try running for office in Cuba. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#6
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![]() "Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... "David" wrote in message ... Nobody listens to AM radio anymore. What a waste of money. Does this mean KFI can go to 100 kW? This station is a special situation. It's most likely beamed toward Cuba, and meant only for their listening. Yep. There is a 3 tower in-line directional system, and it is aimed at Cuba. There is a sw parallel out of Greenville, and there has even been recent use of an airborne MW transmitter once a week on 530 AM... a search of Glen Hauser's bulletins will find details on this bizarre use of taxpayer money. You can bet a LOT of folks in Cuba still listen to AM radio, They do. Almost all the state budget for radio is spent on AM. FM broadcasting exists, but not in the scale found elsewhere in Latin America. since it's reasonably easy to get Florida stations (when the jammers aren't going... that is.. Actually, it is not easy to get FL AMs, since Cuba has stations on all but a couple of AM frequencies, and multiple stations on the channels where there are Miami Spanish stations, like 710, 670, 1140, etc. Martí is blocked on 1180 by some of the biggest transmitters still running in Cuba. There are no jammers in the conventional sense (either the ones that produced hets, or noisemakers) any more. ergo the need to have a 100KW signal). Interviews with emigrants from Cuba show that Martí gets considerable listening despite the locals on 1180. |
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