Talk:RAW 1251AM

Untitled
This article says that the radio signal was broadcast through an "induction loop". Although this is possible, I think you are referring to carrier current transmission which was popular on college campuses because it did not require an FCC license. A small radio transmitter fed a few watts of radio signal through a capacitor into the 110 vac power wiring of a dorm building. The dorm wiring acted as a radio antenna transmitting to radios in dorm rooms in that building and in other buildings on the same circuit. Very little of the signal escaped into the power transmission lines outside the dorms. Carrier current transmission was made obsolete by Internet audio streaming. Greensburger (talk) 15:04, 13 June 2009 (UTC)

Whilst this appears to be the correct name in the UK in student radio and in all the documentations we have at the radio station for the system it has been referred to as an induction loop system. As I can ascertain from the plans the system works on an entirely separate wiring loop to the power in the building and from stories I have heard they actually had a large amount of issue with transmission levels onto a nearby road as well as speaker grills still receiving the signal with the radio turned off. Widders (talk) 21:04, 25 May 2011 (UTC)

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