Talk:WRGB
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I removed the statement "WRGB does not mention this additional way of coverage." They do mention 87.7 FM reception, especially as a way to receive severe weather coverage. n2xjk 12:55, 30 August 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Fair use criteria
The use of images not in compliance with our fair-use criteria or our policy on nonfree content is not appropriate, and the images have been removed. Please do not restore them. — Moe ε 21:25, 30 June 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Possible typo
Under history the article states 'The station also broadcasted on the frequency of 379.5 MHz'. I think this frequency is incorrect and 37.9MHz might have been intended, but as there are no references cited I can't check. John a s (talk) 00:02, 19 January 2008 (UTC)
- "WRGB's analog signal audio can be heard on 87.7 FM in most areas the video signal can be received (and some that it cannot). This is because of the electromagnetic field effect which puts the audio signal of channel 6 at the location of 87.75 MHz with tuners getting the signal at 87.7 FM." seems like gobbledygook. Yes, TV audio is frequency modulated and the sound carrier for NTSC channel 6 is 87.75 MHz, but there is no special "electromagnetic field effect" at work here that isn't applicable everywhere else. The channel 6 frequency allocation is directly below the 88-108MHz broadcast FM band and NTSC TV audio uses medium-bandwidth FM, so evidently an FM radio tuned to 87.75 will pick up audio. No magic required. ;) --66.102.80.212 (talk) 22:19, 25 May 2008 (UTC)