Originally posted by: zimu
i think it just amplifies, it receives the signal from surrounding areas and amplifies it to the locale
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: zimu
i think it just amplifies, it receives the signal from surrounding areas and amplifies it to the locale
so how does the originating tower get it?
how does the stuff get from the radio studio to the originating tower?
also, if it rebroadcasts, doesn't that result in some degradation of the quality?
Originally posted by: zimu
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: zimu
i think it just amplifies, it receives the signal from surrounding areas and amplifies it to the locale
so how does the originating tower get it?
how does the stuff get from the radio studio to the originating tower?
also, if it rebroadcasts, doesn't that result in some degradation of the quality?
good point. i can picture the first tower being close to the origin radio station which does all the initial broadcasting.
i guess what i proposed woudl work if the signal were digital. but radio is analog if i'm not mistaken, so quality would degrade as you rightly say. maybe they just use phone lines?
Originally posted by: Joeyman
they get a bunch of stuff from satalite
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: Joeyman
they get a bunch of stuff from satalite
so i should look for a satellite dish near the base of the tower, good thinking . that makes sense. although the delay from the satellite might be a problem i would think
Originally posted by: Kenazo
I think a lot of them are fed by microwave, at least the station i worked at was. It fed the tower w/ a microwave communications system of some sort, the tower had a bunch of equipment that in turn rebroadcasted it on the FM.
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: Kenazo
I think a lot of them are fed by microwave, at least the station i worked at was. It fed the tower w/ a microwave communications system of some sort, the tower had a bunch of equipment that in turn rebroadcasted it on the FM.
microwave dishes are the fairly small ones , like satellite, but they point horizontally, vice up towards the sky/satellites, right?
i'll have to scout out the tower some more tomorrow when i am down there
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Yay, a thread I can give a real answer to!
Step 1:The program originates in its studio, usually in one of the big cities.
Step 2:The program is processed and transmitted via satellite to the radio station itself.
Step 3:The program, and all local stuff, is run into processors to equalize it and whatnot.
Step 4:The broadcast goes through coax to the tower (if the tower is close), or it does through an STL (Station Transmission Link), which is like a point-to-point broadcaster that sends the signal to the main broadcast tower.
It very well could be their main tower. The STL transmitter at the actual station just sits on a little tower so that it has a line-of-sight to the STL reciever on the broadcast tower. The tower is out in the middle of nowhere because it's a better location for transmission, which has a lot to do with altitude, the local terrain, soil moisture, and soil composition.Originally posted by: FoBoT
hmm...
excellent
so if this tower is 30 miles from kansas city in the middle of nowhere, it is unlikely to be a "Main broadcast tower"
i would guess
i am guessing it is rebroadcasting something, maybe it is linked to the "Main broadcast tower" by this STL (microwave?) system so that it is synched with the original tower.
thanks everyone :gift:
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Originally posted by: FoBoT
The tower is out in the middle of nowhere because it's a better location for transmission, which has a lot to do with altitude, the local terrain, soil moisture, and soil composition.
you haven't been to this part of missouri 😉
flat and more flat
few trees, no hills for a long long way
the water table is high. there are several ponds in the neighborhood. i don't know about soil composition
i wonder if the FCC website has info as to the location of radio towers, maybe i can find out who owns it/what station it broadcasts
Originally posted by: FoBoT
you haven't been to this part of missouri 😉
flat and more flat
few trees, no hills for a long long way
the water table is high. there are several ponds in the neighborhood. i don't know about soil composition
i wonder if the FCC website has info as to the location of radio towers, maybe i can find out who owns it/what station it broadcasts
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Yay, a thread I can give a real answer to!
Step 1:The program originates in its studio, usually in one of the big cities.
Step 2:The program is processed and transmitted via satellite to the radio station itself.
Step 3:The program, and all local stuff, is run into processors to equalize it and whatnot.
Step 4:The broadcast goes through coax to the tower (if the tower is close), or it does through an STL (Station Transmission Link), which is like a point-to-point broadcaster that sends the signal to the main broadcast tower.
hmm...
excellent
so if this tower is 30 miles from kansas city in the middle of nowhere, it is unlikely to be a "Main broadcast tower"
i would guess
i am guessing it is rebroadcasting something, maybe it is linked to the "Main broadcast tower" by this STL (microwave?) system so that it is synched with the original tower.
thanks everyone :gift:
Originally posted by: Kenazo
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Yay, a thread I can give a real answer to!
Step 1:The program originates in its studio, usually in one of the big cities.
Step 2:The program is processed and transmitted via satellite to the radio station itself.
Step 3:The program, and all local stuff, is run into processors to equalize it and whatnot.
Step 4:The broadcast goes through coax to the tower (if the tower is close), or it does through an STL (Station Transmission Link), which is like a point-to-point broadcaster that sends the signal to the main broadcast tower.
hmm...
excellent
so if this tower is 30 miles from kansas city in the middle of nowhere, it is unlikely to be a "Main broadcast tower"
i would guess
i am guessing it is rebroadcasting something, maybe it is linked to the "Main broadcast tower" by this STL (microwave?) system so that it is synched with the original tower.
thanks everyone :gift:
Are you sure it's radio? there are lots of other communications towers too, cell phone, some private ones, all sorts of things.
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Originally posted by: FoBoT
i wonder if the FCC website has info as to the location of radio towers, maybe i can find out who owns it/what station it broadcasts
Link:The ownership, location, and coverage area for most radio stations.
Originally posted by: Kenazo
Originally posted by: FoBoT
Originally posted by: Chaotic42
Yay, a thread I can give a real answer to!
Step 1:The program originates in its studio, usually in one of the big cities.
Step 2:The program is processed and transmitted via satellite to the radio station itself.
Step 3:The program, and all local stuff, is run into processors to equalize it and whatnot.
Step 4:The broadcast goes through coax to the tower (if the tower is close), or it does through an STL (Station Transmission Link), which is like a point-to-point broadcaster that sends the signal to the main broadcast tower.
hmm...
excellent
so if this tower is 30 miles from kansas city in the middle of nowhere, it is unlikely to be a "Main broadcast tower"
i would guess
i am guessing it is rebroadcasting something, maybe it is linked to the "Main broadcast tower" by this STL (microwave?) system so that it is synched with the original tower.
thanks everyone :gift:
Are you sure it's radio? there are lots of other communications towers too, cell phone, some private ones, all sorts of things.
Company: Missouri RSA No 7 Limited Partnership dba/Mid-Missouri Cellular
Location: Pittsville,MO
Registration ID / Type: 1230023 / TOWER
Longitude: 93.9864 (93D 59M 11S)
Latitude: 38.8347 (38D 50M 5S)
Directions: 1.09mSof USHwy50;1.12mSE of Pittsville,MO at bearing 169dgres;0.27mEofStHwy131
Elevation/Height: 271.0 / 127.7 meters, 889 / 418 feet
Structure Type TOWER - Free standing or Guyed Structure used for Communications Purposes
Constructed 10/30/2001
i guess i could call Sylvia or kzentgraf and ask them what it is, but i guess the "Mid-Missouri Cellular" means it is a cell tower. hmmm, doesn't look like a cell tower. oh wellOwner
Missouri RSA No 7 Limited Partnership dba/Mid-Missouri Cellular
1500 S. Limit
Sedalia , MO 65301 P: (660)620-1114
E: kzentgraf@mid-mo.net
Contact
Lesse , Sylvia
2120 L St NW Ste 520
Washington , DC 20037 P: (202)296-8890
E: klc@klctele.com