
The FCC
Get Coordinated!
What to do if your Frequency is not Available
If there is not a frequency available at that site, you can try another
address somewhere nearby (often right outside of town helps), or you can
try clicking on one of the nearby co-ordinate sets that the FCC recommends
lower on the page. (if there are no available frequencies within ten kilometers,
the FCC website will tell you that). It will give a list of potential
transmitter sites and it will say for example "try moving __ km N and
__ km W." Keep clicking on the different highlighted co-ordinates until
you hit the jackpot.
If this process fails to produce results for you, call Prometheus. We
have a more sophisticated version of this software which can ferret out
possible channels and locations in your area. The software that we have
is not as powerful as the databases employed by professional broadcast
engineers, but it can find many things that the channel finder can not
and we will run it for free for community organizations.
If our software finds nothing, and you are still determined, broadcast
engineers for between $100 and $300, will do a search for you that can
identify potential locations. Broadcast engineers also have software that
can predict the performance of your station much more accurately than
the FCC channel finder, and can identify topographical and interference
issues thancan help you choose one site over another.
[Back to the main FCC page]
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