Re: [IRCA] Opinions requested on documenting station swaps
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Re: [IRCA] Opinions requested on documenting station swaps



Mike Hawkins wrote:

I used your reply as a reference here because it addresses two things.
First is that FCC's website has so little information on it that is
accessible outside the FCC that its rather useless.  Tracking applications
always results in "major change", "minor change", STA or license.  I have
not been able to view an authorization for many moons.  There is little if
any correspondence, and legal action is rare.

Two things here:

First, the FCC will soon be abandoning the CDBS database in favor of a new, more versatile database system that's being billed as having more direct public access. So much of what I'm about to explain will soon be obsolete.

That said: there's actually lots of information accessible there. You just have to know where to look. Here are a few basic tips; I'm happy to go into greater detail either on- or off-list if there's interest.

I find the quickest way into CDBS is through FCCInfo.com. It's a privately-operated site, and it's free. The basic searches are right at the top of the front page: search by callsign, COL, distance from a given community or set of coordinates, FCC facility ID number, etc.

KTRB offers a good example. Plug those calls into the "callsign" search box, be sure you've checked the "AM" radio button to the left, and be sure you've checked the "Include Archive Records" box beneath the callsign.

What comes up is this (watch for word wrap):

http://fccinfo.com/CMDProFacLookup.php?sCurrentService=AM&calls=ktrb&ArchiveRecords=Y&tabSearchType=Call+Sign+Search

There's a lot of chaff here, but also a lot of good information. Ignore all the "0 kW" power entries for now - they represent FCC records with no engineering data attached. Ignore anything with a blank space or "App" in the "Status" column on the left.

What matters to us are actual license records and construction permit records...and here's what turns up: there's a set of license records for the old Modesto facility, with 50 kW days and 10 kW nights. We know that's no longer active, because it shows up as an archived record. Then we see another set of licenses for the former 50/50 San Francisco-licensed facility. Those show up as "archive records," too...but we can get at the engineering data for those, or for the Modesto facility, by clicking on the callsign for each entry.

Then we have the current license. Unless the database records are screwy (and occasionally they are), there should only be one active set of "license" records for any given station. Click on those and we learn more about the current KTRB 50/50 facility - location (with a link to a Google map), tower layout, directional pattern and more.

This page also gives us a link called "Other KTRB Applications," which returns us to the FCC's own website, to the "Application Search Page" that can also be accessed directly from the FCC's AM Query:

http://licensing.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/ws.exe/prod/cdbs/pubacc/prod/app_list.pl?Facility_id=66246

This page links us to all the applications that are in CDBS; generally, that will include at least some information about anything filed after 1978, though detailed electronic applications only exist from the last decade or so.

If the application was filed electronically (look for the "E" in the "Paper/Elect" column), you can see it by clicking the "application" list.

Which brings us to the complex system of prefixes the FCC uses for apps. The ones that matter to us as DXers are BL-, which indicates an AM station's application for a license, BP-, an application for a construction permit, BMP-, an app to modify an existing construction permit, BMJP-, an application for a major modification (change COL, change frequency more than 30 kHz) and BSTA/BLSTA-, an application for special temporary authority.

What you get when you click on the application link is the application itself, which often includes a full engineering narrative that explains in detail what the application intends to do. A good example is in the KTRB app to move from Modesto to San Francisco, which appears on the application list as BMJP-20020910AAB. The first part of the application consists of a bunch of form entries that are filled out by the applicant, but the meat is in the attachments. Keep scrolling down to the section marked "exhibits," and here's your meat - a link marked "ENGINEERING STATEMENT."

That brings up this:

https://licensing.fcc.gov/cdbs/CDBS_Attachment/getattachment.jsp?appn=100662136&qnum=5110&copynum=1&exhcnum=1

which in turn tells us this:

"The application appended to this Statement proposes relocation of the transmitting site of AM Radio Station KTRB, pursuant to Commission Decision (Reference 1800B3-TSN, copy attached), which authorizes reassignment of community of license from Modesto,
California to San Francisco, California.
The transmitting site proposed herein is on Jersey Island within the delta region of the San Joaquin River. From this site predicted signal strength over all the City of San Francisco will exceed the required level of 5 mV/m day and 11.01 at night. Separate
directional radiation patterns are proposed for day and night.
As proposed, the day operation will not cause interference to nor receive interference from any other existing station or proposals now before the Commission. Nighttime operation will not increase interference to any other station beyond presently existing values. The interference- free contour from the re- located site is slightly lower than interference- free service from the presently licensed KTRB Modesto operation."

In KTRB's case, the proposal ended up being massively modified before the station went on the air, so you have to keep reading through a bunch of modified CPs to learn that the plan changed to dual-site operation (daytime at Jersey Island/nighttime in the hills above the Sunol Grade), then to single-site operation at the Sunol site, then back to dual-site operation with daytime at the KFAX site in Hayward and nighttime at Sunol.

This one is an unusually complex application; most stations have a much shorter trail of applications, CPs and licenses that's easier to follow.

So...the information is indeed there, if not always in the most accessible form.

Second is that I asked the question from the perspective of documenting
radio history without any regard for logging of stations.  DXers would be
interested in history to varying degrees, but the perspective may be
radically different.  The two examples I gave - as well as the one Mike
Sanburn mentioned - really highlight two different perspectives ... the
listener noticing two frequency changes, and the FCC noting two call
changes.  Please note that I am not at all dismissing the DXer point of view
(and obviously welcome that point of view since I asked the question here),
but I am trying to consider as many different perspectives as possible...as
long as they hold water.

I'm passionate about documenting radio history, too, of course - and to that end I'd suggest another really useful resource.

David Gleason has done the radio community a tremendous favor by acquiring and scanning a nearly complete run of Broadcasting Yearbooks, White's Logs, RADEXes and much more, which he's sharing with the world - for free - at americanbroadcastinghistory.com. It's a great way to track information that predates what's now in CDBS, and I use it constantly.

s
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