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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">Just picked this up after returning
from overseas:<br>
<br>
I think Paris was something of a special case when they
re-assigned the FM band Glyn. A typical French FM community
station in the sticks would have a 200 watt linear feeding a stack
of four dipoles. In Paris they assigned all 50 channels to the
National and commercial stations including a few community slots
which I think were all shared by the dozen or so
interest/ethnic/religious bodies. I don't remember there being
any that did not cover the whole city, hence the unusually high
power. That was all many years ago, but it was interesting to us
because all the original local French FM stations were pirates
since only medium and long wave was then in use generally.<br>
<br>
Para 3 below: I've said this before: Radio Cracker!!<br>
<br>
Channel allocations: Actually now may be the time for the CMA to
bid for this, if the authorities wish to devolve licensing? For
special events (JFMG) and radio amateurs (RSGB) are doing it
already. It's not a broadcasting issue since that would come
under regulation, just radcoms. Why don't we bid for a community
radio sub band and let the BBC and ILR do the rest?<br>
<br>
Tony Bailey<br>
<br>
On 05/11/15 12:34, Associated Broadcast Consultants wrote:<br>
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cite="mid:CAG9-nrYyA7vwPj6U9_o8iFM+bWpN26=K6Z_NeUS7L84KM95dxw@mail.gmail.com"
type="cite">
<pre wrap="">Interesting James (your insights - not the document that is a boring
financial statement).
I recall seeing somewhere that all the community stations in Paris are on
6kW from very high tower blocks. Alternative models for community radio
can and do work, even in Europe.
Personally I'd like to see a more flexible approach at both ends - ie:
accommodate larger "community of interest" stations, maybe with stronger
rules if needed and at other end of the scale also some smaller
neighbourhood stations - say 1-5 watts with bare minimum light-touch
regulation that prevents interference concerns Maybe allocate a single
channel to be used anywhere in the country, with no guarantees of coverage
quality similar to WiFi unlicensed approach. Or something else that
embraces alternative approaches that others on this forum have alluded to
rather than the current rather quaint, paternalistic approach.
IMHO
Glyn
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<pre class="moz-signature" cols="72">--
Local Reports at <a class="moz-txt-link-freetext" href="http://www.ravensound.pilgrimsound.co.uk">http://www.ravensound.pilgrimsound.co.uk</a></pre>
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