Re: Fm Stations in the 80's
Posted: Fri Jan 19, 2018 11:22 am
PirateTapes wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2018 11:22 am
There was a Chicago 87 though.On air in 1987. Think it was 94.5 in stereo.
The 1987 lot came from a couple of blocks in Plumstead and Woolwich. They had one rig seized from a block in Woolwich by the Army because they thought that it was a "suspect device"! They briefly used the same link frequency as RFM, so their rigs relayed RFM on Sundays!PirateTapes wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2018 11:26 am
There was a Chicago 87 though. On air in 1987. Think it was 94.5 in stereo.
Just found a bit of info on them. Apparently they might of been on 90.6 aswell.
Chicago '87 94.5 FM
Formerly Horizon '87 and now playing upfront soul and Chicago house music.
News
After broadcasting mostly at weekends since the start of the year and then managing a short stretch of 7 day a week broadcasting, Horizon '87 returned at the end of August and then transmuted Into Chicago '87 (reports suggested one Christopher Stewart Esq. was not happy about someone else using the name). Since then they've been keeping up 7 days a week broadcasting with hardly a break. The 94.5 signal reaches mainly South East London, Kent and Essex, so a new transmitter Is proposed to serve the rest of London on 90.6.
http://www.amfm.org.uk/tx/tx16/amfmlondon.html
Have a vague memory of something like that happening with LWR aswell with a rock station cutting in maybe on there link or main transmitter signal. Was RFM close to LWR at some point? Or was that RFL?Albert H wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2018 3:25 amThe 1987 lot came from a couple of blocks in Plumstead and Woolwich. They had one rig seized from a block in Woolwich by the Army because they thought that it was a "suspect device"! They briefly used the same link frequency as RFM, so their rigs relayed RFM on Sundays!PirateTapes wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2018 11:26 am
There was a Chicago 87 though. On air in 1987. Think it was 94.5 in stereo.
Just found a bit of info on them. Apparently they might of been on 90.6 aswell.
Chicago '87 94.5 FM
Formerly Horizon '87 and now playing upfront soul and Chicago house music.
News
After broadcasting mostly at weekends since the start of the year and then managing a short stretch of 7 day a week broadcasting, Horizon '87 returned at the end of August and then transmuted Into Chicago '87 (reports suggested one Christopher Stewart Esq. was not happy about someone else using the name). Since then they've been keeping up 7 days a week broadcasting with hardly a break. The 94.5 signal reaches mainly South East London, Kent and Essex, so a new transmitter Is proposed to serve the rest of London on 90.6.
http://www.amfm.org.uk/tx/tx16/amfmlondon.html
PirateTapes wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2018 12:51 amAlbert H wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2018 3:25 amThe 1987 lot came from a couple of blocks in Plumstead and Woolwich. They had one rig seized from a block in Woolwich by the Army because they thought that it was a "suspect device"! They briefly used the same link frequency as RFM, so their rigs relayed RFM on Sundays!PirateTapes wrote: ↑Fri Jan 19, 2018 11:26 am
There was a Chicago 87 though. On air in 1987. Think it was 94.5 in stereo.
Just found a bit of info on them. Apparently they might of been on 90.6 aswell.
Chicago '87 94.5 FM
Formerly Horizon '87 and now playing upfront soul and Chicago house music.
News
After broadcasting mostly at weekends since the start of the year and then managing a short stretch of 7 day a week broadcasting, Horizon '87 returned at the end of August and then transmuted Into Chicago '87 (reports suggested one Christopher Stewart Esq. was not happy about someone else using the name). Since then they've been keeping up 7 days a week broadcasting with hardly a break. The 94.5 signal reaches mainly South East London, Kent and Essex, so a new transmitter Is proposed to serve the rest of London on 90.6.
http://www.amfm.org.uk/tx/tx16/amfmlondon.html
The 80's stations was called "Radio Activity" on 93MHz or thereabouts. It was frequently in stereo and got pretty good coverage given the low blocks they used. Some of the people involved with that moved on to Starpoint, which mostly came from Crystal Palace.
Talking about the silences between tracks....FMEnjoyer wrote: ↑Sun May 13, 2018 9:23 pm
I'll be honest, the only thing that gets close are community stations these days. You know long gaps of silence
as they go boil a cuppa and the track runs out etc. Those days were unpredictable and fun and had an air of mystery about it all. Random switch offs, raids and staring out of your house seeing dipoles up and down from different stations. You knew who was on your local blocks cause they sent the needle to the end of the meter.![]()
I think Nightingale vale was one of the blocks in the woolwich area. there was another too just a bit further down the road...PirateTapes wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2018 12:52 amPirateTapes wrote: ↑Mon Jan 22, 2018 12:51 amAlbert H wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2018 3:25 am
The 1987 lot came from a couple of blocks in Plumstead and Woolwich. They had one rig seized from a block in Woolwich by the Army because they thought that it was a "suspect device"! They briefly used the same link frequency as RFM, so their rigs relayed RFM on Sundays!
RFM now that was a really great station... They tried some transmissions on 819 on the MW band too from nearAlbert H wrote: ↑Sun Jan 21, 2018 3:25 am The 1987 lot came from a couple of blocks in Plumstead and Woolwich. They had one rig seized from a block in Woolwich by the Army because they thought that it was a "suspect device"! They briefly used the same link frequency as RFM, so their rigs relayed RFM on Sundays!
I thought Q102 and Veronica had a frequency sharing arrangement?Albert H wrote: ↑Thu Jun 20, 2019 9:58 am The London "Veronica" spent one Sunday jamming Q102's link - playing Elvis Costello's "Veronica" repeatedly on a tape loop - since they were annoyed that Q102 had flattened their piss-poor signal over most of London. We got to the Palace on the Sunday evening, and installed a rather different link receiver to the Q102 site, and normal service was resumed. "Veronica" moved frequency the next weekend!
Boring Barry believed that 102 was HIS frequency, and made every effort to jam Q102 itself or its link. The Q102 rig in Church Road Crystal Palace was well over 400 Watts into a twin-slot colinear, so the ERP was pretty huge. Barry and his pals couldn't muster more than about 50 Watts, which they used to put on that block at Baker's Arms. They used to get really p***ed off when they just couldn't hear themselves ½-a-mile from their site! In the end, Veronica moved to 102.4 and Q102 stayed put!house-every-weekend wrote: ↑Sun Oct 27, 2019 6:16 pm I thought Q102 and Veronica had a frequency sharing arrangement?