New FM station 95.3 "95X" rocks..

Discussion in 'Discussion Group' started by Copperhead, Nov 26, 2012.

  1. Copperhead

    Copperhead Member

    Great new triangle station that flat out rocks!!!
     
  2. jtm

    jtm Well-Known Member

    Heck, yeah, it does! 95X is close to what 96 Rock was *about* to become maybe 10 years ago, before 96 Rock decided it wanted to go mostly classic rock. I can't believe Raleigh has been without an alt rock station this long.

    Unfortunately, they've got a relatively weak signal. It comes in fine in the car, but I can't pick it up in the house, at work, etc.
     
  3. Copperhead

    Copperhead Member

  4. CraigSPL

    CraigSPL Well-Known Member

    From the article, 250 watts doesn't seem like alot of power for a radio station.
     
  5. jtm

    jtm Well-Known Member

    250 watts really isn't a lot at all, but they have a pretty solid signal in the car (around Raleigh and southern Wake County) considering... I try to listen at work on 105.1's HD-2 signal, but it doesn't come in that well where I am and cuts out a lot. Before 95X, 105.1's HD-2 signal was carrying a satellite or "I Heart Radio" alt rock format that was very similar to 95X. I listened to that at work as much as I could.

    I hope they're able to do something eventually to increase their signal. I'd hate to see them dump a great format because of signal problems, and then use that as a reason why rock doesn't work in Raleigh.
     
  6. Webmaster

    Webmaster Administrator

  7. Clif001

    Clif001 Guest

    6. Postings concerning business "opportunities", advertisements
    for products or services, multi-level marketing, etc. should be
    posted in the 4042.com FREE Classifieds - not in the Discussion
    Group.

    A bit of "do as I say not as I do"? :mrgreen:
     
  8. Clif001

    Clif001 Guest

    You really need a sense of humour. :p
     
  9. Clif001

    Clif001 Guest

    Nope, that honour would go to Dіck Martin.
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Nov 27, 2012
  10. BuzzMyMonkey

    BuzzMyMonkey Well-Known Member

    LOL,,
     
  11. dangerboy

    dangerboy Well-Known Member

    the FCC is opening up more FM frequencies to smaller power transmitters to encourage more local radio. i rode with 95x all the way from capital and the beltline to smithfield today....

    regarding why alt rock has never really appeared in raleigh other than as spice for classic rock or when top 40 was forced to play a lot of it in the 90s...well, it's all y'all's fault actually. it has never tested well with the 25-54 "money demo". it does well with 18-35, but many advertisers (beers for example) will not buy stations whose demos are too young. a small transmitter and minimal overhead will allow for it to exist without the financial demands of a 100k station like 96.1.
     
  12. Grinder

    Grinder Well-Known Member

    Never have enjoyed 90's or alt music. Never found any energy in it or find the songs fun. You listen and after the song its....meh..
     
  13. jtm

    jtm Well-Known Member

    Dangerboy, does the difference in power really make that much difference in costs? I mean, 95X is obviously mostly automated, and the jocks they have were already employed with Clear Channel (so I assume they're salaried and not getting paid any extra). So, other than the electricity, I assumed operating 95X would be the same as operating any other mostly-automated station.

    I know that formats like this don't test well, but it basically has no competition. Not every station can be a G105 or WQOK, so (speaking to stations that aren't country, urban or pop) find your niche and own it, even if it's not getting the largest share!
     
  14. CraigSPL

    CraigSPL Well-Known Member

    jtm,

    even a fully/mostly automated station still has to have a large enough following to sell some advertising to pay the monthly bills for operation.
     
  15. ServerSnapper

    ServerSnapper Well-Known Member

    Greenboro has the best Rock station around and that's 100.3. They play metal and Rock. When I drive through I hit it all the way to VA. Check em out. Some one needs to clone it.
     
  16. jtm

    jtm Well-Known Member

    CraigSPL: I know, but ANY format should be able to generate enough revenue to pay the electric bill. Especially a company with multiple stations (if you buy 2 ads on G105, for 10% more we'll throw in an ad on 95X). People (DJs) are likely the biggest cost.

    My main point was wanting to know if there was really that much overall cost difference in running a 100k watt station compared to a 2.5k watt station.
     
  17. CraigSPL

    CraigSPL Well-Known Member


    But a company isn't going to pay that 10% more if they don't think the ROI is there. And if the demographic doesn't fit an advertiser then there is 0% ROI.
     
  18. BuzzMyMonkey

    BuzzMyMonkey Well-Known Member

    I also like 92.3 out there
     
  19. ditch digger

    ditch digger Well-Known Member

    East of here

    99.5 or 105.5
     
  20. dangerboy

    dangerboy Well-Known Member

    @jtm the cost of the equipment is hugely different between a 100k FM Stereo transmitter and a 250 watt (that's how small the 95x transmitter is, although they are also looking at putting one up in durham). there's also the consideration of the tower. that 250 watt transmitter is sitting 1500 feet in the air on already leased CC tower space. this "relaxation" has been done to encourage LOCAL, SMALL radio businesses. unfortunately, the CCs of the world can take advantage of that. most places whose budgetary limitations put them in the category of having a transmitter less than 1k are not able to hang it on a 1500 foot tower. many smaller stations with transmitters up to 6K would be lucky to have a nice 500 foot tower. that makes a HUGE difference in how far the signal will carry. and yes, CC has g105 et al to package together. they can package it with the river pretty nicely, too. but the smaller companies that this was intended to help wouldn't have that resource, wouldn't have that "foot in the door". an indy company who rounded up enough money to finance a small transmitter and maybe lease some space on an existing tower is going to struggle no matter what format they play, because they are an unknown entity...

    oh, and don't assume the jocks don't make extra. one of them is the program director, and an air shift is part of his job. but clear channel has ALWAYS paid their employed jocks 5 or 6K extra to voice track a shift on another station. anyone remember big rig who did nights on rdu towards the end of the rock era? HE WAS NEVER HERE. he was the afternoon guy at the CC station in tampa. he was already full-time employed, but they gave him an extra 5k for every station out of that market that they put him on. before or after his shift, he'd go into the production studio, open an email containing the music log for the next day (all music is prescheduled. there are format clocks to follow. commercial breaks happen at the same time every hour. the software knows where a person is supposed to jump in and talk, and indicates that on the log), record his talking parts to be inserted into the music, and emailed it back. probably took an hour a day to do the whole 5 hour night shift. not a bad gig if you can get it...
     
    Last edited: Nov 28, 2012

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