This article will be permanently flagged as inappropriate and made unaccessible to everyone. Are you certain this article is inappropriate? Excessive Violence Sexual Content Political / Social
Email Address:
Article Id: WHEBN0011422484 Reproduction Date:
This is a list of broadcast station classes applicable in much of North America under international agreements between the United States, Canada and Mexico. Effective radiated power (ERP) and height above average terrain (HAAT) are listed unless otherwise noted.
All radio and television stations within 320 kilometers (about 200 miles) of the U.S.-Canada or U.S.-Mexico border must get approval by both the domestic and foreign agency. These agencies are Industry Canada/Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) in Canada, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the U.S., and the Federal Commission of Telecommunications (Mexico) (CFT) in Mexico.
Notes:
AM station classes were previously assigned Roman numerals from I to IV in the US, with subclasses indicated by a letter suffix. Current class A is equivalent to the old class I; class B is the old classes II and III, with class D being the II-D, II-S, and III-S subclasses; and class C is the old class IV.
The following conversion table compares the old AM station classes with the new AM station classes:
The following chart is a list of available station classes and clear-channel station listings in North America by frequency.[2]
The following table lists the various classes of FM stations, the reference facilities for each station class, and the protected and city grade contours for each station class:[3]
Historically, there were local "Class A" frequencies (like AM radio's class C stations) to which only class A stations would be allocated & the other frequencies could not have a class A. According to the 1982 FCC rules & regulations those frequencies were: 92.1, 92.7, 93.5, 94.3, 95.3, 95.9, 96.7, 97.7, 98.3, 99.3, 100.1, 100.9, 101.7, 102.3, 103.1, 103.9, 104.9, 105.5, 106.3 & 107.1.
The U.S. is divided into three zones for FM broadcasting, (I, I-A and II). Depending on which zone a station is located determines what class a FM station may elect to be.
Zone I in the U.S. includes all of Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Delaware, Illinois, Indiana, Massachusetts, Maryland, New Jersey, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, and West Virginia. It also includes the areas south of latitude 43.5°N in Michigan, New Hampshire, New York, and Vermont; as well as coastal Maine, southeastern Wisconsin, and northern and eastern Virginia.
Zone I-A includes California south of 40°N, as well as Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
In Zones I and I-A there are no Class C, C0, or C1 stations. However, there are a few Class B stations with grandfathered power in excess of 50 KW, such as WETA-FM licensed to Washington, DC (zone I), which has a power of 75 kW ERP, and KPFK in Los Angeles (zone I-A) at 110 KW ERP.
All Full power analogue television station transmissions in the USA were terminated at midnight Eastern Daylight Time on June 12, 2009.[4][5] Many broadcasters replaced their analogue signal with their digital ATSC signal on the same transmission channel at that time.
LPTV (secondary) (suffix: -LP, or a sequential-numbered callsign in format W##XX with no suffix for analogue or with -D suffix for digital, or -LD for low-power digital stations):
The LPTV (low-power television) service was created in 1982 by the FCC to allocate channels for smaller, local stations, and community channels, such as public access stations. LPTV stations that meet additional requirements such as children's "E/I" core programming and Emergency Alert System broadcasting capabilities can qualify for a Class A (-CA) license. [9]
Broadcast translators, boosters, and other LPTV stations are considerd secondary to full-power stations, unless they have upgraded to class A. Class A is still considered LPTV with respect to stations in Canada and Mexico.
Class-A stations (U.S.) (suffix: -CA or -CD for digital class A):
The class-A television class is a variant of LPTV created in 2000 by the FCC to allocate and protect some low-power affiliates. Class-A stations are still low-power, but are protected from RF interference and from having to change channel should a full-service station request that channel. [10]
Additionally, class-A stations, LPTV stations, and translators are the only stations currently authorized to broadcast both analogue and digital signals, unlike full-power stations which must broadcast a digital signal only.
In Canada, there is no formal transmission power below which, a television transmitter is considered broadcasting at low power. Industry Canada considers that a low power digital television undertaking "shall not normally extend a distance of 20 km in any direction from the antenna site," based on the determined noise-limited bounding contour.[11]
The United States Federal Communications Commission lists the following services on their website for television broadcasting:
Michigan, California, Broadcasting, History of radio, Telecommunication
Title 47 of the Code of Federal Regulations, Telecommunication, Law, Barack Obama, New York City
Watt, International System of Units, Ocean, Radiation, United States
Federal Communications Commission, United States, Canada, Indiana, Rhode Island