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The (hi)story of RADIO 101(note: you can click most of the pictures to see them in full size)
1981, January 16th: the first transmission of "Sender Freies
Pfalzdorf" run by Chris and Blecky in Goch at the dutch border in the north-
west German area called Niederrhein. The self-made FM transmitter
Picture on the right: a small FM stereo-transmitter which can be switched on and off remote-controlled by every CB-rig plus DTMF-encoder. That kind of technique was used by 101 in Austria later.
In the years of 1983 to 1989 the shortwave transmitter was on the air every
Sunday morning, first on 7450, then 7350, 7360 kHz.
Once a local FM radio station, WRKY Killarney/Big L Limerick
of Mike Richardson and his crew (see photo) was relayed on shortwave. The phonecalls of listeners in France an Germany were
During that time there were lots of activities on FM: 1985: Back to the Niederrhein: In March 1985 a new
RADIO 101 transmitter in FM stereo went on the air.
The 150 Watts-TX on FM 101.6 was located in Nijmegen (NL), beaming to Kleve (D).
Dave Fonzo, Marijke Schillings and Cliff Bailey were mainly running that station, which later
moved into a village near Kleve/Germany. In the Summer of the same year
a second RADIO 101 site was installed and run by Erhard and Chris. Erhard owned
- how handy! - a record shop. (...well, by the way, sometimes there came somebody
into his record shop an said things like "Could it be that I heard YOUR voice in
the radio, presenting the top 20?" - and then he answered like:
"Oh, no Sir, that really can't be!" ) 1986: In Aachen, 110 km south of the scenery described
before, RADIO 101
and HENRI RADIO (Henri-Chapelle) joined
RADIO TELSTAR, a station managed by former members of BNL RADIO and
RADIO FANTASY like Helmut Slawik, an absolute free-radio-enthusiast
More pictures of RTI you can see here: (click here).
The transmitter site was located just 6m next to the German border. Because
of that and other problems that site was closed down some years later.
Then, in the nineties there was built a microwave link from a studio at Pontstrasse in the
center of Aachen to another relay-transmitter on that "Dreiländereck/triangle"- hill.
The music tapes played 24h a day by a tape-changer and live events like parties
were aired by microwave beam first to a relay and from there to the triangle,
later directly to the triangle-relay transmitter. Some other relais, fed by a VHF
signal were set up. The frequency 101 MHz could not be used anymore because of
another local transmitter, but the name RADIO 101 still remained. So the direct
and relayed FM signals were to be heard on 87.8, 104.2 and 107.4 MHz.
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IT'S ILLEGAL:by Paul W Griffin / Radio World magazinePaul Griffin, who works at Free Radio Berkeley, a micro station in California, estimated the number of micro-broadcasters to be in the hundreds. "One's too many," said John Earnhardt, a spokesman for the NAB. "It's illegal." "This is all about money," said Griffin. "These commercial broadcasters are so afraid that they are going to lose listeners to micro-stations that they will do anything to try and shut down this whole movement." He said he and others plan to demonstrate against the NAB during its spring convention in Las Vegas. "We're opposed to monopolistic practices carried on by the NAB," Griffin stated. Griffin said he would like to see the FCC reinstate some sort of licensing procedure for low-power FM. He noted that low-power FM stations were legal up until 20 years ago... ...The lack of a legitimate outlet for micro-power broadcasters has stalled the government case against Stephen Dunifer, who founded the unlicensed Free Radio Berkeley in 1993. On Nov. 12, 1997, U.S. District Judge Claudia Wilken denied an FCC motion for summary judgment against Dunifer for operating Free Radio Berkeley without a license. Her decision, seen in the industry as a big victory for Dunifer, was based on his argument "that relief should not be granted to the FCC because he cannot obtain a license to broadcast under the FCC's regulations which he claims are unconstitutional." More recent arguments between Dunifer and the FCC reiterate the same points. "Yes we should apply for a license," Griffin wrote in an e-mail to RW, "but the FCC has made this nearly impossible for anyone except the conglomerates that currently are buying up all the media in the country. Micro-stations are trying to make a point by practicing what we call 'electronic civil disobedience.' That is, when the laws make no sense, it's time for ordinary citizens to stand up and publicly break those laws and challenge the laws in court." << PREV << Top of this page >> NEXT PAGE >> |
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