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bpnjensen wrote:
On Apr 2, 3:24 pm, wrote: I just now saw on WJTV 5:00 PM tv news where a woman in Holland,Michigan, somehow her car went airborne and her car landed at an angle on some power pole guy wires/cables. cuhulin There's just no accounting for what happens in Holland. Didn't WOWO give up their night coverage for a sister station back East? |
#12
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On Apr 2, 2:19*pm, DEFCON 88 wrote:
On Apr 2, 7:18*am, Gregg wrote: On Apr 2, 4:00*am, dxAce wrote: Priest wrote: Very cool site has the history of radio station WOWO 1190 AM; photos of studios, transmitters and staff through the decades and audio clips of station IDs, jingles and interviews.http://www.historyofwowo.com/ I've sat in the studio while Bob Sievers (SK W9FJT) did his morning program and hung around the transmitter site when I was a kid. My grandparents farm was a stones throw away, and on occasion Grandpa would mow the area around the towers. *Steve, that is pretty close to my story with WLW, though I never actually "physically" sat in the studio. My grandparents/greatparents built the first house in a area called Pisgah, which is right down the road from - - at the time - WLW's studio and their bad ass looking antenna emblazoned with the "WLW" letters (still there and used) on it. Of course with the VOA Bethany Shortwave Station right by it - it was unbelievable to see as a kid - I had no idea what shortwave radio was when I was five/six yrs. old. At night time it was nothing but lights and wires as far as you could see and the power from the VOA overrode my dad's old car radio when he pulled over to the side of the road - that's when it was explained to me by my Dad what the VOA was about. That is pretty cool childhood memories you have of there, I wish I could have sat in their studio as a kid. WLW actually transmitted 500,000 watts for a while! http://www.crosleyradios.com/pdf/WLW...e-1935-LR.pdf- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Indeed it did, there is no way I'm going to go through and dig out all that info, I know me, and I'll start reading everything in site and it will be a couple weeks before I get to it.:-) I'll find the links, it only takes a little time but I can't do it tonight or tomorrow. My Grandparentls - and by that I mean BOTH of them told me similiar stories of the The Nation's Station pumped out the wattage and their neighbors both basically said the same things. You could hear WLW in your basement, you could hear WLW in your shower or bath when the water was either running or had been run (without a radio), you could hear them in the garage. My Grandparents weren't anyone to bull**** things or exaggerate a story to make it sound better and I know for a fact the neighbors wouldn't have done that - - plus the stories from my Dad. The German's and Hitler felt that Cincinnati was the huge thorn in their side coming from the states. Ha! Can you imagine? Half a million watts? Especially during the time when that area wasn't anything but farmland and cornfields...lol....my grandparents were right there. The look of that VOA Bethany Relay at nighttime was absolutely unbelievable. |
#13
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![]() The basic innards haven't changed all that much, but the envelope technology definately has. The tubes they used in the 30's were huge glass bottles (R. Peking used to have finals that you could go inside of and change the elements, rather than replace the tubes!). In places where they still use tubes at all (not very many anymore), the things tend to be much smaller ceramic types. By far the most popular technology for AM broadcast is now modular banks of high power MOSfets. http://hawkins.pair.com/rci1.shtml |
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