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A little station history.
Ontario CING-FM Burlington, Shaw Radio Ltd. 1976 CING-FM began broadcasting on September 23. The station was owned by Burlington Broadcasting Inc. Studios were at 4144 South Service Road. CING operated on 107.9 MHz with 100,000 (50,000 horizontal & 50,000 vertical) watts effective radiated power. Antenna height - 500 feet or 152.4 metres. 1978 September - FM 108 begins playing oldies, on the all-night show. 1980 CING-FM adopts an oldies and nostalgia format as FM 108. 1981 FM 108 began playing The Music of Your Life from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., with oldies through the rest of the day. 1989 March 3 - CING-FM began using the CRN satellite service overnight. 1991 September 1 - CING-FM changed to a dance format, as DANCE 108. 1997 On April 9, the CRTC approved a power decrease for CING-FM, from 50,000 to 26,100 watts, and a relocation of the transmitting facilities to a new site approximately eight kilometres northwest of Burlington and to increase the antenna height. On June 10, the CRTC approved an application by Shaw Radio Ltd., and a group of individual shareholders to purchase Burlington Broadcasting Inc (CING-FM). Later in the year, Shaw acquired 100% of CING-FM. "Tony Meloche" wrote in message ... grumpus wrote: Hi all. This past Spring I put my Cambridge Soundworks Model 88 table radio, designed by the late Henry Kloss, through its paces on the FM broadcast band. For the duration of the test, the radio sat in one place in a ground floor room. The only antenna used was a cheap $2 plastic dipole tacked haphazardly to the wall; it too remained in one place throughout the test. Here are my results (4 part log snipped). Good post, Grumpus. It appears that the radio has excellent sensitivity with a very conventional antenna, and that your maximum distance reception was about 120 miles - that would be top-end for any good FM receiver with a dipole. It also appears that CING, Burlington (Hamilton) is the old CKDS that I used to listen to all day when I was working in Western New York during the summers of 1970, '71 and '72. I would be more interested in how many of those stations past the 90 mile range you were getting in good, listenable stereo. In "the old days", any good, two-channel stereo image at a distance of 100 miles was considered to be top-flight FM DX. Tony ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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