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Transmitters that use carrier current are very simple, making them an effective option for students interested in radio.
At the time, they broadcast via carrier current, and could only be heard on the Brandeis campus.
The students launched the experimental radio station to study carrier currents, the subject of their thesis paper.
List of unlicensed high school radio stations - Carrier current, Part 15, streaming audio, etc.
At this point, the station broadcast via AM carrier current on 710AM.
With carrier current, wires are placed in these buildings, and any radio plugged into an outlet in one of the buildings could receive AM 560.
It had previously operated only on carrier current, with an effective radiated power of just 20 watts, on the AM band at 660 kHz.
It transmitted on the 830 AM frequency in the dormitories via carrier current (a low-wattage transmission using the wiring in buildings).
The "broadcasting" was done via cable and carrier current, rather than FM or AM, which was available to on-campus facilities only.
This was an unregulated, dorms-only station that operated on a carrier current, transmitting within the dorms, Levering Hall, and the Charles apartments.
Beginning in March, 1959, The station initially "broadcast" to the CUA campus via AM carrier current.
WODU-AM was broadcast across the campus on a "carrier current" throughout most of the buildings on the campus when it launched in 1974.
It started broadcasting using Carrier Current in the Student Center before moving its studios to the TECH center.
Low-power transmitters such as those mentioned above are also sometimes used for neighborhood or campus radio stations, though campus radio stations are often run over carrier current.
KMPS was a "Progressive rock" station broadcasting on a carrier current; only people in the dorms and other campus buildings wired into the system could hear its signal.
By the early 1990s, WERW operated on carrier current at 750 AM and was available in Syracuse University's dorms and some other campus buildings.
Focused on providing a service for the student body, it originally broadcast via carrier current on campus, using the frequency 730 A.M. (hence the oft-used tag-line "Radio 73").
The station broadcast via carrier current from the basement of the 132-134 Beacon Street dormitory, and grew in success that included legitimate commercials, news programming and a station-owned van.
In its earliest inception, WRSU was an AM Carrier Current Station that broadcast from the basements of several Rutgers dormitory buildings.
WQUB began in 1948 as WWQC, a carrier current on the campus of Quincy University, then known as Quincy College.
A new student staff resurrected the College radio station in 1982 as WROX-AM, an album-oriented rock format broadcasting to individual campus buildings over carrier current at 690 AM.
CJMQ originated in the 1940s as the Radio Club of Bishop's University, a campus radio station at Bishop's University which broadcast by closed circuit and carrier current.
In its early years, the station was run on carrier current, meaning it was a very low power AM station that did not require an FCC license and broadcast through the campus electrical system.
Carrier current is most often associated with college radio, high school radio, and hospital radio stations, but is also used at military bases, sports stadiums, convention halls, mental and penal institutions, trailer parks, summer camps, office buildings, and drive-in movie theaters.
The station was set up to broadcast through the electric system in the dormitories of East Halls, via a carrier current, a system that failed miserably, so the station's main broadcast was through speakers into Johnston and Findlay commons.