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AM 1710 Antioch is an Old-time Radio Shows station located in Antioch, IL, a mile from the Wisconsin border and 20 miles inland from Lake Michigan. The AM transmitter is a micro-power part15 AM RangeMaster1000 transmitter. Our house is in the middle of town where the houses are densly spaced. Range is about 1/2 mile covering hundreds of households. Since the below satellite picture was taken, other neighborhoods now exist to the west.
Tested with a portable radio on walks and car
radio on drives There are nearly 18,000 shows of which about 11,000 are automatically scheduled. And there are over 1,600 pieces of 20's - 50's music to fill time between shows. The Library of shows and music occupies 147 GB in a Mirror Drive Door (MDD) Dual-Gig G4. The MDD also has the job of scheduling all shows with in-house custom software written in REALbasic, playing the shows and music in iTunes controlled via Applescript. Collections are merged from various sources--comparing and making judgements and even fixing audio, dates and spellings where I can. Audio quality is not always ideal but sometimes the content is so good it demands inclusion anyway. This is particularly true with The Whistler and Quiet Please episodes. I'd prefer hearing surface noise to a loss of fidelity and I'd sometimes prefer a more complete show if the audio is a little worse and sometimes I'll even merge two files into one. Large collections take years to listen to so this is an ongoing process. But I spot check everything by listening to the first 30 seconds, sampling several places in the middle and listening to the end. I sometimes have to remove long annoying 30 second to 2 minute trailing silence. I've often done pitch corrections and careful noise reduction where I can to remove clicks and narrowband noise such as hum using notch filters and low and high cut filters. It's certainly possible to simply purchase a loaded hard drive or dozens of DVDs on eBay of mp3 OTR shows for various prices from $90 for 10,000 to $1,000 for up to 40,000 shows but I can't think of any case where this results in my idea of quality, though I haven't tried the latter. Even from the best "HQ" sources there can be problems so having more than one HQ source is an advantage. From the more commonly available mp3s available from probably hundreds of vendors, I've heard the worst examples of very bad decisions at the digital stage such as encoding stereo at a mono bit rate like 32Kbps stereo 22KHz sampling. I've heard noise reduction techniques that make things sound underwater. I've heard AOL sign-in and Windows desktop sounds (just lovely and embarrassing to hear played on a Mac). I've heard mp3 encoding glitches that sound like hiccups. I've heard large amounts of leading and trailing silence which is like counting rings on a tree as I hear the different hiss sounds of many generations of tape recordings. I've encountered lots of missing ID3 tags. I've encountered duplicate files just with different file names claiming to be and episode they're not. I've heard audio drop-outs consistently every few seconds for an entire 900-show Suspense collection. Some good sources have already disappeared. One
source for which I've purchased several hundred shows is no longer
in business and I can't find those shows at that quality anywhere
anymore. Good thing I got as much as I did when I did since there's no
telling how long before we see it again. The
Suspense collection available at OTRNow
is very close to
my collecting standards with the exception of a bit of underwater noise
processing on some episodes. OTRNow is a good starting point for
any collector since it is relatively cheap and quality can be very
excellent. Jerry
Haendiges's collection is also an excellent source for hundreds of
shows I've received for high quality. He has some rare ones and he
tends to be close to the source. But no one is perfect. At least
when what I get is already digital high-fidelity, I can work with it to
improve it. There are others but you're on your own from here. Please
don't ask me more about my sources. The result is after years of collecting, the
total size of the collection has only grown modestly but the quality is
uncommon. Thousands of shows are now digitized directly from Electronic
Transcriptions or master reels which over the past few years has become
an investment of thousands of dollars and uncountable time. Scheduling of shows is an automated process where shows are selected by the following priority: 1. Shows that match today's date that have not
played recently Where recently = a few months to a few years depending on category. In the case of Comedy shows, this can be 2 to 3 years whereas with Spy Stories it can be just a couple months. Serials just rotate. The dates are read as a date object and audio is concatenated to present an introduction of original play date including the day of the week. Station IDs and an "Up Next" file are compiled along with music fill. Since we're matching today's date and since most of you don't stay awake listening for 24 hours, there are replays of several sub-genre segments across the day so you don't have to worry about missing much. Audio Processing The source material is varied in quality so in audio processing I tried to make the best compromise. First the tracks are virtually normalized with iTunes Sound Check function. iTunes plays the audio which uses Volume Logic to lightly process (AGC, 5-band compression, and limiting) the audio in realtime. Nicecast digitally captures the audio that iTunes is playing. I use a couple Apple Audio Units and VST effects in Nicecast to roll off the extreme highs and lows (such as rumble) not useful or desirable for AM or low sample-rate streaming. From there it goes to two places: 1. Nicecast encodes the audio using LAME and passes it on to a shoutcast server on a major internet trunk at fast-serv.com which serves the internet streams. 2. Nicecast runs a parallel audio chain which processes the audio more aggressively with audio units before sending it out of USB audio breakout box, through an impedence converter, and then to the transmitter on the roof. |