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Karl Uppiano wrote:
The station was KCID AM in Caldwell, ID. 1490KHz/1KW. I worked there from 1978 to 1986. I don't think it's there anymore. Google indicates otherwise, unless the pages it finds are out of date. When I took it over, the studio-transmitter link was 5KHz telephone lines. One of my first projects was to install a microwave STL which gave us 15KHz bandwidth end-to-end. Then I spent considerable effort bringing the entire audio chain up to FM specs. My goal was to pass an FM audio proof of performance on an AM station, and the management at the time supported this goal. We met this goal for all of the parameters that were applicable to AM. Noise and distortion were the most difficult parameters to keep in spec. AM stations in the standard broadcast band are limited to 10 Khz modulation bandwidth and therefore to 5 Khz audio bandwidth. It would seem, then, that your station was in violation of bandwidth limitations. -- ================================================== ====================== Michael Kesti | "And like, one and one don't make | two, one and one make one." mrkesti at comcast dot net | - The Who, Bargain |
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