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Radio Sensación XHMEX-FM: 104.9 MHz Ciudad Guzmán: Emisoras de Zapotlán, S.A. de C.V. La Mexicana Regional Mexican XHIS-FM: 106.3 MHz Ciudad Guzmán: Radio Sistema del Pacífico, S.A. de C.V. La Rancherita 106.3 Regional Mexican XHCGJ-FM: 107.1 MHz Ciudad Guzmán: Government of the State of Jalisco Jalisco Radio Public radio XECSAW-AM 560 ...
Oklahoma State University: NPR / News/Talk / Adult album alternative KOSR: 88.3 FM: Stillwater: Oklahoma State University: NPR / News/Talk / Adult Album Alternative: KOSU: 91.7 FM: Stillwater: Oklahoma State University: NPR / News/Talk / Adult album alternative KOTV: 1170 AM: Tulsa: Griffin Licensing, L.L.C. All-news radio KOUA: 91.9 FM: Ada ...
1.1 By State. 1.2 By callsign. 1.3 ... Download QR code; Print/export ... Below is a list of radio stations in North America by media market. United States. By State ...
Pages in category "Radio stations in Jalisco" The following 45 pages are in this category, out of 45 total. ... Code of Conduct; Developers; Statistics; Cookie statement;
At the start of September 2018, XEAAA and XEBBB exchanged formats, with ESNE Radio moving to 1040 and RadioMujer moving to 880 AM, because XEAAA had been selected to migrate to FM as XHEAAA-FM 92.7. The FM station began test broadcasts on September 5, 2018, with full programming scheduled to begin on FM on the 10th.
Carlos Fregoso Mendoza bought XEZJ in 1966, and power increased to 500 and later 1,000 watts. XEZJ-AM was known as Radio Selecciones in the late 1970s and early 1980s, Zona Juvenil in the 1980s, 14-80 in the late 1990s, sports-formatted Solo Fútbol from 2003–06, and carried Radio Trece programs from 2006 to 2008.
The concessionaire was changed in 1994. The AM station operated 50 kilowatts during the day and 10 kilowatts at night on 1190 kHz from a transmitter at Atemajac del Valle, Zapopan, Jalisco. [2] In 2017, XEWK-AM was authorized for second-wave AM-FM migration on 101.5 MHz as XHWK-FM.
XEZK-AM 1600 received its concession on November 6, 1960. It was owned by José Ismael Alvarado Robles and known as Radio Alteña. The 250-watt station increased power to 1 kW day by the 1980s, and in the 1990s it moved to 550 kHz and increased power to 2.5 kW day and 1 kW night.