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Aggregator

A Big Spot Radio Lead For A Big Home Improvement Brand

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

The latest Media Monitors Spot Ten Radio report is out, and it’s very clear who wins the home improvement retailer battle when it comes to spot count.

Lowe’s has been practically silent with its radio advertising, while Menards continues to use radio where it has stores. Nationally, there’s no competition.

And, that Home Depot domination continued in the week ending April 18, Media Monitors data show.

The latest report also shows that Indeed, the job search website, is the lone other campaign to register more than 50,000 play counts in the last week.

 

Adam Jacobson

Hearing Set to Determine Ohio AM License

Radio World
4 years ago

Vandalia Media Partners is inching closer to receiving an answer on its whether its license renewal application will be granted or denied.

The Media Bureau at the Federal Communications Commissioned announced that a status conference will be held virtually on April 28, at 10 a.m. as part of a hearing on renewing Vandalia’s license. Earlier this month the Media Bureau announced that an administrative law judge will work to determine whether or not to renew the license of AM radio station WJEH in Gallipolis, Ohio.

[Read: AM Station’s Spotty Operational Schedule Puts License at Risk]

The move is in light of the station’s minimal record of operation, the bureau said. Vandalia began broadcasting with the WJEH license on Dec. 31, 2019, and during its tenure as licensee (from December 2019 through 2020), the station was silent for 364 days and operated for two days at an authorized reduced power level of 100 W.

The Communications Act states that if a broadcasting station fails to transmit broadcast signals for any consecutive 12-month period, then the station license expires at the end of that period. This was set up by Congress to relieve the burden of conducting a drawn-out license renewal or revocation proceedings for stations that remain silent for extended periods of time.

The commission subsequently found that some licensees of silent stations respond by resuming operation for a short period of time — in some cases as short as a day — before the one-year-limit hits to prevent automatically license expiration. Others alternate between periods of silence and operations with minimal power levels that only cover a small portion of their service areas.

In cases such as these, the commission cautioned that “a licensee will face a very heavy burden in demonstrating that it has served the public interest where it has remained silent for most or all of the prior license term.”

The method for renewing an application is fairly straightforward. According to the FCC Rules, a renewal is granted if the bureau finds that the station met three key requirements: the station served the public interest, convenience and necessity; there have been no serious violations of the Communications Act of 1934 or FCC Rules; and there are no major violations that would constitute a pattern of abuse.

When these three tenets cannot be met, the renewal application is designated for a hearing. Because of the WJEH’s extended periods of silence and operation at significantly reduced power during its license term, the bureau was unable to find that grant of the renewal application is in the public interest.

A proposed schedule with next steps will be laid out during the virtual conference. The commission said that interested parties can share relevant documents and comments about this case through April 26 via the commission’s Electronic Comment Filing System.

 

The post Hearing Set to Determine Ohio AM License appeared first on Radio World.

Susan Ashworth

TASCAM Releases USB Microphone

Radio World
4 years ago

The TM-250U from TASCAM is a USB condenser microphone with a supercardioid pattern.

The company says that it is aimed at direct connection computer audio for podcasting, dialog and vocal recording, music recording, conferencing, and other forms of online audio.

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

The digital audio output is 16-bit/48 kHz. It has mic gain and a headphone output volume control along with a mute switch.

It also ships with a 6-foot USB C-A mic cable, mic holder and a desktop mic tripod.

Info: www.tascam.com

 

The post TASCAM Releases USB Microphone appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

A Wieser View On Televisa-Univision? Hey, Big Spender

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

Spanish-language content was in focus last week with the blockbuster news that Univision Communications would be merging with Mexico-based Televisa, combining the struggling operator’s content operations with Univision — a key recipient of its programming.

GroupM’s Global President of Business Intelligence, Brian Wieser, was compelled to take a close look at the deal.

His assessment? “With a similar scale among Spain’s dominant media owners and significant investment in related content from Netflix, ViacomCBS, Disney and others, significantly increased investment will likely be required to accomplish stated goals.”

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Adam Jacobson

Why Is This Key Analyst Still Bullish on FOX?

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

Despite what MoffettNathanson Senior Analyst Michael Nathanson calls the “recent turmoil” among media stocks, the respected Wall Street financial house has increased confidence that Fox Corporation shares will outperform.

Why? Nathanson points to “improving fundamentals in the near term.”

He also likes what Thursday night holds for FOX in the coming years.

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Adam Jacobson

Local News. Premium Content. Free, From Byron Allen

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

LOS ANGELES — The owner of The Weather Channel and a growing collection of broadcast TV stations including the ABC affiliate for the Hawaiian Islands has just launched a free streaming ad-supported service steeped in local news.

It’s available on most major platforms, bringing information on demand through another “over the top” offering.

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RBR-TVBR

From Des Moines to Houston, A Radio Jewel Says Goodbye

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

He’s enjoyed a 53-year career in radio that saw him break through the sales management ranks by taking the General Manager role for a heritage Class A AM in Des Moines and its FM sibling.

In 2004, he joined Salem Media Group, and today oversees its AM/FM combo in Houston.

On April 30, Chuck Jewell will bid farewell to Salem, and to the radio industry.

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Adam Jacobson

NFL, iHeartMedia Launch NFL’s Podcast Network

Radio World
4 years ago
Getty Images/Yasinguneysu

iHeartMedia has snared a huge sports brand for its latest podcast partnership: the National Football League.

The two organizations announced an “exclusive” partnership to launch the NFL’s podcast network; it will include distribution of NFL Media’s current podcasts plus co-production and distribution of two dozen more.

The announcement was made by NFL Senior Vice President, Media Strategy and Business Development Kevin LaForce, iHeartMedia Digital Audio Group CEO Conal Byrne and iHeartMedia President of Entertainment Enterprises John Sykes.

LaForce was quoted in the announcement, “Podcasts are an increasingly important way to reach fans and a compelling way to tell NFL stories.”

The partnership will have access to NFL Films archival content. Tbe NFL podcasts will be distributed through the iHeartPodcast Network.

Byrne called the deal “an incredible moment for iHeart and the podcast industry, period.”

The post NFL, iHeartMedia Launch NFL’s Podcast Network appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

EMF’s Four Corners Grab

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

U.S. Highway 160 traverses the Navajo Nation, from northern Arizona through the “Four Corners” region and onward to Interstate 25 on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains. It’s one of the most picturesque routes in North America, and along the way one can tune to a New Mexico-based FM with a trio of translators in key southwest Colorado cities where Native Americans reside.

This explains why Vertical Radio, the first Christian radio station serving the region, was born. Now, the station’s Navajo operators are yielding the 40-year old facility to the fastest-growing non-secular broadcaster on the continent.

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Adam Jacobson

A Heritage N.C. AM’s Christian Conversion

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

Some 19 years ago, a Class C AM serving a coastal North Carolina community began simulcasting an FM Talk station with a signal best heard in Morehead City, New Bern and points east. This gave the Talker better coverage of Jacksonville, N.C.

Now, “The Talk Station” is saying goodbye to its AM component.

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Adam Jacobson

Leon Hunt Lets An FM Loose In Louisiana

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

Due south of Shreveport is the city of Mansfield, La. It’s home to a Class A station licensed to Leon Hunt and his Hunt Broadcasting.

Soon, it will be licensed to a new owner.

Classic Country KJVC-FM 92.7 is being spun to Sputnik Media LLC.

To be clear, this isn’t the controversial “Sputnik” operation tied to the Russian government. Rather, it is a Louisiana operation led by Quinn Echols.

A $100,000 purchase price has been agreed upon, with a 10% earnest money deposit made to Hunt.

As a separate transaction, Sputnik, for a period ending three months after the date of Closing, gains the exclusive option to acquire from Hunt Broadcasting a Broadcast Electronics STX LP-2 2 kW FM Transmitter for a purchase price of $15,000 cash.

Adam Jacobson

User Report: Telos Keeps It All in the Family

Radio World
4 years ago

The author is sound technician for Nicklas Strömberg Produktion AB.

TRELLEBORG, Sweden — The last bit of the sound chain has sometimes been the most awkward.

Long distances, humming copper wires, external interference, heavy rain, lightning and hard-to-reach towers can be challenging. Not to mention the expensive sound processors that have to be placed at the transmitter out in the woods or up on the mountain!

Now, with the technology that transmits a complete MPX signal from the studio-side audio processor to the transmitter, it has become so much easier.

In a recent project for a customer, we replaced seven AoIP codecs, seven sound processors and seven RDS encoders with a single Omnia.9 processor and seven Omnia MPX Nodes.

Having the Omnia.9 in-studio also means that the customer’s Livewire production environment now delivers a completely unbroken digital audio chain from playout server to transmitter, and each transmitter gets fed the same great Omnia.9 sound.

The connections from the studio to the seven sites are of different classes. Point-to-point fiber, radio link and internet via ADSL. Since the MPX Node only requires a 320 kbps data stream, there are no problems with buffering. In an emergency, 4G mobile data also works well, but there can be problems with that, for example, longer latency.

It came as an unpleasant surprise to another client when their old internet-connected AoIP equipment was hacked and destroyed, with dead air as a result. Luckily they already had an Omnia.9 in the studio.

When they called me for help, I quickly ordered an Omnia Audio µMPX FM composite license for their Omnia.9 (basically turning it into an STL), and took my spare MPX Node to their transmitter. Only a short while later, they were on air again, and now they no longer have to worry about data intrusion because the MPX node has a built-in secure firewall.

There are several methods of implementation. In some cases, the customer already has an audio processor but it does not support µMPX. The Omnia MPX Node is also available as an encoder providing an easy end-to-end connection by simply adding two to the workflow. The MPX node encoder can even send redundant streams to multiple MPX Node decoders for multiple transmitter sites.

The easiest implementation is if the sound processor is an Omnia.9, which has the secure µMPX function built in. It can send up to 16 simultaneous streams (or more on a private network that permits multicast), so if it is a large station with 16  transmitters, it can save a lot of money as the air chain no longer needs expensive sound processors at each transmitter. One Omnia.9 in the studio and 16 MPX Nodes is enough. This reduction in technology investment means there will be more money left over for content and staff.

Radio World User Reports are testimonial articles intended to help readers understand why a colleague chose a particular product to solve a technical situation.

For information contact Cam Eicher at The Telos Alliance in Ohio at 1-216-241-7225 or visit www.telosalliance.com.

The post User Report: Telos Keeps It All in the Family appeared first on Radio World.

Nicklas Stromberg

Another Viewing Platform for EstrellaTV

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

Haven’t had much luck locating the Estrella Media-owned Spanish-language broadcast TV network on your MVPD’s channel lineup?

Here’s another way to view it — one that may work for you, or TV viewers in your market.

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Adam Jacobson

Auction of AM and FM Broadcast Construction Permits Scheduled for July 27, 2021; Notice of Filing Requirements, Minimum Opening Bids, Upfront Payments, and Other Procedures for Auction 109

Federal Register: FCC (Broadcasting)
4 years ago
This document summarizes the procedures, deadlines, and upfront payment and minimum opening bid amounts for the upcoming auction of certain AM and FM broadcast construction permits. The Auction 109 Procedures Public Notice summarized here is intended to familiarize potential applicants with details of the procedures, terms, and conditions governing participation in Auction 109.
Federal Communications Commission

CBS News Radio Remotes With RadioMan

Radio World
4 years ago

CBS Radio News has been using Jutel’s RadioMan 6 radio automation for making work-from-home viable for its continued pandemic operations

The news programming provider effectively shuttered its New York-based operation in March 2020. It had recently been auditioning and testing the latest version of the automation system.

[Read: Jutel RadioMan Gets New Architecture]

CBS News Radio Digital Media Manager Dustin Gervais said, “The timing of the release of RadioMan 6 couldn’t have been better. Just as we needed to evacuate our broadcast center due to COVID, RadioMan 6 became just the tool we needed to allow anchors at home to broadcast hourly newscasts without expensive codec equipment.” RadioMan handled clips, interviews and voice segments along with providing timing framework from CBS News Radio staffers, on-air talent and contributors from across the country.

Amazon Web Services was used as a production and marshaling node. Jutel’s Olli-Pekka Lukkarinen said, “Final distribution of news was then streamed to the delivery point, where it could be delivered to listeners via Skyview satellite system.”

Send news for Who’s Buying What to radioworld@futurenet.com.

 

The post CBS News Radio Remotes With RadioMan appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Røde Connect Software Augments NT-USB Mini Mics

Radio World
4 years ago

Augmenting its NT-USB Mini USB microphones, released last year for content creators, podcasters and the like, Røde Microphones has introduced a free recording software package that works solely with the mic — Røde Connect.

Intended for podcasting and streaming use with the NT-USB Mini microphone, which was first introduced at NAMM 2020, the software allows users to connect up to four NT-USB Minis to a single computer, offering additional integration with video call and streaming applications, and more.

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

Available in versions for Mac and PC, Røde Connect provides a virtual recording interface offering faders, level metering, mute buttons and more. The software includes DSP tools such as a noise gate, compressor and Aphex Aural Exciter and Big Bottom effects.

Users can incorporate audio from remote guests, integrate streaming applications, add music beds and other external audio via virtual channels, and the software additionally provides automatic mix-minus on every channel. There are also dedicated output controls for streaming apps like OBS or Xsplit.

Røde Connect can be downloaded for free at the company’s website.

Info: www.rode.com

The post Røde Connect Software Augments NT-USB Mini Mics appeared first on Radio World.

ProSoundNetwork Editorial Staff

Changes Coming in National Alerting

Radio World
4 years ago
A screenshot of a cell phone shows actual emergency messages on Jan. 13, 2018 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The background is a composite. (Screen image: Eugene Tanner AFP via Getty Images)

Congress wants better emergency alerting for the United States. So the Federal Communications Commission is working on several ways to accomplish that.

Among other things, the FCC wants to get state governments to improve their own alert coordination efforts. It wants to replace the WEA “Presidential Alert” with a “National Alert” that can be issued by the president or the Federal Emergency Management Agency, an alert that mobile users cannot turn off. And it wants to explore the possibility of alert dissemination via the internet.

The FCC, now under the leadership of Acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, is taking public comments on proposed changes to the Emergency Alert System and Wireless Emergency Alert system.

Many of the steps are mandated by Congress, so the question for the commission is not whether to take them but how. The FCC said it’s crucial that emergency alerts include accurate information and that any new procedures be trustworthy.

The EAS, as most Radio World readers know, is the national public warning system through which broadcasters, cable systems and other EAS participants deliver alerts to warn the public of impending emergencies and dangers to life and property.

While best known for local weather and other warnings and tests, the system’s primary purpose is actually one for which it has never been used: to allow the president of the United States to provide immediate communications to the public in a national emergency.

Broadcasters are required to carry presidential alerts; they participate in state and local alerts voluntarily. The FCC, FEMA and the National Weather Service implement EAS at the national level.

The reform push comes at the direction of Congress as part of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2021. The spending bill included the Reliable Emergency Alert Distribution Improvement (READI) Act, which gave the FCC its charge.

One industry observer said they were “pleased with the elegant solutions the FCC crafted to meet the congressional mandates.”

Focus on the states

For one thing, the commission wants the 50 states and the U.S. territories to do a better job at managing their part of the alerting infrastructure.

The states and territories would be asked to review the composition and governance of their State Emergency Communication Committees. Those SECCs would be required to meet at least once a year and to submit an updated EAS plan annually; the FCC would have to accept or reject each plan within 60 days. The commission also would provide a checklist of information to be included in state plans.

One longtime EAS observer told Radio World they are pleased to see the FCC finally include rules that say state EAS plans are to be administered by the SECCs, something that has been missing from the rules.

The FCC also proposes that state plans, currently posted on its website, would not be publicly available except for names and contact information of SECC chairs.

[“FCC Issues an EAS Enforcement Advisory”]

“Disclosure of the plans, at least in form where each plan is one place and in a uniform and easily searchable format, could highlight potential vulnerabilities that malefactors could exploit, thereby potentially hindering emergency planning efforts,” it wrote.

Another change would enable jurisdictions to report false EAS or WEA alerts to the FCC Operations Center when they occur. The commission said such a system would allow planners to learn from incidents like the false missile alert in Hawaii that was distributed in 2018.

EAS participants are already required to report false alerts, but there’s no system for other stakeholders to report them voluntarily.

Repetition discussion

Congress also told the FCC to modify EAS to provide for the repetition of national security alerts issued by the president or FEMA. The commission devotes several lengthy paragraphs of its NPRM to the repetition issue and its associated mechanics.

The commission said the EAS system is already designed to allow repeated alerts from any originator as long as at least one minute has passed, but it said this capability may not be fully understood in the alerting community. It proposes to keep its rules regarding transmission and retransmission but add language specifying how an originator can repeat a message.

It thinks that automating the repetition of alerts, including setting the repetition intervals, should be achievable with “minimal changes” to alert software programs on the market, though it suspects that many encoder/decoder models would require modifications.

But it proposed that only the president or his or her designee be allowed to repeat the president’s Emergency Action Notification alert. It thinks that requiring EAS participants’ equipment to automatically repeat the alert would present technical impediments that may impair the president’s ability to issue EANs. For instance, requiring a predetermined interval of automatic repetition could cause problems in fast-evolving emergency situations.

It invited comments on a long list of questions including whether automatic (or manual) repetition of national security alerts by participants’ EAS devices is technically feasible. It also asked whether widespread repetition of state and local alerts might cause alert fatigue.

The NPRM also asks whether the FCC should adopt a National Command Authority (NCA) alert originator code for FEMA and whether it should create a National Security Event (NSE) event code for FEMA that would encompass “warnings of national security events, meaning emergencies of national significance, such as a missile threat, terror attack, or other act of war or threat to public safety.”

Veteran EAS observer Gary Timm said broadcasters should watch these developments closely, including the discussion about a methodology for repeating national-level alerts.

“The FCC proposed that the most obvious solution is for the alert originator to simply resend the message as many times as they desire it to be heard again. The other possibility the FCC presented is requiring EAS units to be modified to automatically repeat alerts, which could require money and time to upgrade at every station, if it is even feasible,” Timm said.

EAS experts told Radio World that the originator of an alert for any emergency should have complete control over the number of repetitions, the rate of repetitions, the update of old information to new, and the decision to end repetitions.

Harold Price, president of Sage Alerting Systems, said, “Having the originator reissue the message as needed, the FCC’s primary proposal, is the best path. Trying to automate repetition at the broadcast end adds a lot of cost throughout the EAS ecosystem, could make the system more fragile, and can result in message congestion and overlapping new and old information at a time when clarity is most critical.”

He continued: “EAS has always given any originator the ability to repeat information by simply sending an additional alert. This is a matter of training and procedures at the origination point, and perhaps modifications to alert origination tools to permit the easy reissuing of an alert. This is the best way to address the issue.”

Roy Baum, director of engineering and technology for Alpha Media in Topeka, Kan., said he is “adamantly opposed” to building any automatic repeat function into the existing alert generation system.

“If the emergency message is worth repeating, the entity generating the alert should review it and reissue it with updated information, presidential or otherwise. The current EAS equipment can handle this scenario without any problems,” said Baum, who chairs the Kansas State Emergency Communications Committee.

He said the EAS system was intended to be a “first alert” system, not a “continuous-flow-of-information” system.

“Inflexible”

Adrienne Abbott, Nevada’s state EAS chair, said broadcasters should pay close attention to the FCC’s planned directives to state governments, especially if there is a vacuum in emergency planning in a given state.

“If a state or local official has ever been denied a request for an EAS activation or feels that the broadcasters aren’t giving EAS enough attention, this is an opportunity for those officials to take over EAS,” Abbott said. “To me, this should be a warning to broadcasters to get more involved in EAS and the SECC.”

Larry Wilkins, director of engineering services for the Alabama Broadcasters Association and the state’s EAS chair, thinks that “overall, the EAS system works well” in his state, but said state-level committees can be a weak link.

“Some states just do not have an effective SECC with representatives from all those involved. In Alabama our SECC includes state emergency management, governor’s office, National Weather Service, state broadcasters association, state cable association and radio and television engineers,” Wilkins said.

“The more diversified the list of EAS contributors, the better.”

[“How Alabama Monitors the EAS System”]

Another state chair thinks the FCC is focusing on national-level messaging when errors with local alerts and weather hazards tend to be far more common.

“I would hope that more attention would also be paid to local alerts,” said Mike Langner, SECC chair for the state of New Mexico. “Amber Alerts are frequently issued with insufficient information or in some cases too much irrelevant information. Many states now issue Silver Alerts, and, of course, there are already well established Blue Alerts.”

Langner’s primary concern is a lack of required training so that alert originators know exactly how to do it and how to avoid false ones.

“As I understand it, the failures so far have overwhelmingly been failures of human operators and not failures of the various systems’ hardware and software,” he said.

In addition, Langner says, the level of involvement by radio and TV managers in EAS planning tends to wax and wane.

“As stations are bought and sold and managements’ public service philosophies and practices change, State Emergency Communications Committees should be able to readily change monitoring assignments in state plans to reflect reality on the ground,” he said.

“Currently the system for changing monitoring assignments is cumbersome, requiring a waiver of the old monitoring assignments from the FCC. The system shouldn’t be so inflexible.”

Online alerts

In addition to its NPRM, the commission issued a Notice of Inquiry to explore whether it is technically feasible to deliver EAS alerts through the internet, including through streaming services, and whether and how to use the internet to enhance the alerting capabilities of broadcasters and other current participants.

Several observers said the idea has merit.

“The current EAS rules do not require radio stations that carry EAS alerts, including presidential EAN alerts, to carry the alerts or tests on their internet streams,” one said.

“Should the commission eventually adopt the idea of sending EAS via internet streaming, broadcasters who are streaming their program may have to make routing changes depending where their EAS unit is located, which could be at the station or out at the transmitter site.”

Gary Timm, the Wisconsin SECC chair, said the commission should encourage all broadcaster EAS participants to include alerts on their internet streaming feeds, given that “an increasing number of people are listening to the radio via their internet-connected in-home speakers.”

In many cases, he said, streaming feeds at a broadcast station are upstream of the EAS encoder/decoder in the audio chain.

Adrienne Abbott in Nevada said it is likely there will be concern among emergency alerting experts about overuse of EAS and WEA.

“There also will probably be pushback by some in the EAS community on the additional requirements for reporting false EAS activations,” Abbott said.

Comments in PS docket numbers 15-91 and 15-94 are due April 20 and replies are due May 4. They can be filed in the FCC’s online comment system.

The separate notice of inquiry seeks comment on the feasibility of updating EAS to enable or improve alerts through the Internet, including from streaming services. Comments on that are due May 14, and replies are due June 14.

The post Changes Coming in National Alerting appeared first on Radio World.

Randy J. Stine

The End of the Needless Climb

Radio World
4 years ago
QCommunications uses drones custom-made by BFD Systems to work in high RF environments.

The author is QCommunications Vice President, Airborne Division — QForce.

Drones, “they ain’t just for kids anymore!”

Farmers are using them to measure crops, real estate developers are using them to survey land and medical professionals are even using them to deliver supplies to unreachable areas in disaster zones.

There’s no question about it, these unmanned aerial vehicles or UAVs make it easier to go where no human can or should go, and in the radio business that’s up a 400-foot or higher tower.

The Needless Climb

One drone = Hundreds fewer climbs. Drones bring with them a technology that allows engineers to ascertain and validate different types of structures, pattern signals and various equipment, all without human intervention other than the pilot on the ground.

Inspection by drone eliminates the “Needless Climb,” a phrase coined by QCommunications to describe an unnecessary and dangerous human journey up the side of an enormous tower to get a picture or investigate an irregularity.

Safety first

Warning signs are placed around the work area, entry points of long driveways and other critical locations.

Without putting a climber on a tower, it’s now possible to confirm that a signal is reaching everybody it needs to reach — or not. The drone can perform different types of inspection services efficiently, accurately, safely and faster than a human without presenting a hazard, not only to the pilot, but to the customer or any else in the area.

Three of the most common and important inspections are:

  1. Pattern verification — confirm antenna functionality, installation, operation and coverage, and enable maintenance trouble shooting.
  1. Thermal line inspection — identify hot spots, burn outs, potential burnouts, blocking in system, or connection joint security.
  1. Structural inspection — directly related to the structure and all components surrounding it as part of the anchoring system.  This inspection provides “points of interest” of any potential structural issues and potential failure points so the station engineers can make the best decision to ensure the structure’s safety. This service can also be used for the installation of any new equipment, can validate locations of new equipment and can indicate if a structure is rated to carry a new load.

Not only safe, but smart

Every drone flight reduces a tower climb, lessens risk to life and arms station engineers with information they need to make better, faster, more intelligent, actionable decisions.

With numerous drone service options for tower owners, station engineers and sales and marketing teams to choose from, the need of climbers outside of installation and hands-on maintenance is a thing of the past. Perhaps the greatest benefit of using drones is “tower surveys,” video inspections of a structure prior to any climbers arriving onsite. Climbers can use the imagery to ensure the structure is safe, thus minimizing injury of death.

The reports are also used as interactive engineering tools to mitigate customer viewership issues.

Historically, data was just used to prove FCC minimum requirements were met. Now it’s so much more than that. Drones identify damage, exactly where it is, and make it easier to fix so the signal is back quicker.

Safe and smart, good with money

Advertising only works if it reaches its audience. On the FM side, advertising is dependent upon how far it can go. If a signal is compromised, not reaching its target, advertising is not being delivered and revenues are not being fully generated.

Salespeople, therefore, have become enormous drone fans. The drone captures the data to provide an actual picture and model of the coverage, not a hypothetical. Salespeople are able to use the reports as sales tools to give advertisers factual, visible data about demographics making success more attainable, sales are increased, and stations can charge more money for advertising.

It’s all about the Base(line)

Have you ever asked yourself: Is my 50-year-old tower as sound structurally as it was 50 years ago? Am I getting all the signal strength I should from it, and do I even know what I should expect from it?

Well, the answer is probably not. There could be mistakes residing on the tower for 20, 30 or 40 years. There could be a bee’s hive, or a bird’s nest, or maybe someone painted over something that shouldn’t have been painted over and signal strength is being compromised, or gradually degrading.

Chances are … you don’t know because no one has been up there in decades, maybe the last time was when a light bulb needed to be replaced.

Send the drone up and take a baseline for everything.  Whether the tower is five decades old, or it’s brand new, a baseline for your RF and structural effects will allow you to move forward confidently and evaluate solutions for problems down the road. You can explore, compare and determine what it takes to fix, and what makes sense to invest capital in, and what doesn’t.

In the past several years, numerous towers have fallen. A birds-eye inspection would have uncovered structural weaknesses that could have been repaired and a tower saved.

Once you’ve a baseline, how often should this be done? It depends on the initial find, the age of the equipment and if everything meets regulations.

In the beginning, we’d recommend every five years, but if something changes, or something happens such as a problem with your signal or you’ve been notified that you’re radiating too much out of the line, then send in the drones, because perhaps a seal is broken and you can’t see it, but a drone can and no one’s safety is put in jeopardy.

The Bottom Line

And here’s the section everyone has been waiting for!

First, reports of this magnitude that supported both engineering and sales didn’t exist until now. Secondly, cost and delivery — about half price of a traditional minimal report by human engineers would cost approximately $60,000 to $75,000 following a week and a half of data collection that would result in about 40 photos.

QCommunications fees are approximately $20,000 to $45,000 and include an interactive HD 4K video and interactive visual and planning tools. QComm also encourages engineers to witness the drone data collection process in real time and see their structure preliminary pattern start to generate on their screens for immediate results. A comprehensive report is then delivered within 10 days.

The post The End of the Needless Climb appeared first on Radio World.

Phil Larsen

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FCC Media Bureau News Items
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Amendment of Section 73.622(i), Post-Transition Table of DTV Allotments, Television Broadcast Stations (Medford, Oregon)

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Requests the substitution of channel 16 for channel 10 at Medford, Oregon in the DTV Table of Allotments

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