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Polskie Radio 24 (Polish Radio 24) is the news radio station established by Polskie Radio, the Polish national public-service radio broadcaster. History.
Polskie Radio was founded on 18 August 1925 and began making regular broadcasts from Warsaw on 18 April 1926.. Before the Second World War, Polish Radio operated one national channel – broadcast from 1931 from one of Europe's most powerful longwave transmitters, situated at Raszyn just outside Warsaw and destroyed in 1939 due to invasion of German Army – and nine regional stations:
Polskie Radio (PR) is Poland's national public radio broadcaster and operates four national FM stations: Jedynka - Generalist radio station featuring news, sport and adult contemporary music; Dwójka - High culture, including jazz and classical music, literature and drama
Polskie Radio 24 - (news/talk) - FM, DAB+ and the Internet Audytorium 17 - (public regional radio network) - FM, DAB+ and the Internet Radio Poland - (external service in English, Polish, German, Ukrainian, Russian and Belarusian) - 1386 AM, FM (in selected areas abroad), DAB+ (in Poland), satellite and the Internet
On 18 January 2011, at 11:00 p.m., Polskie Radio Program IV officially started the project Radio na Wizji. [3] It is a television channel, broadcasting as live video feed of the PR4. It's similar project to Italian RTL 102,5 Very Normal People , but the product of Polskie Radio is more advanced. [ 3 ]
Program I began test transmissions on 1 February 1925, and began regular transmissions on 18 April 1926 (as Polskie Radio Warszawa), one year after Polskie Radio was founded. In 1924 the Post, Telegraph, and Telephone Act was passed, and in February of the following year, a broadcasting station built already in Poland started operation. [1]
Hello, hello, this is Polskie Radio Warsaw, wave 480. Local editions of Polskie Radio started being created all across the country, usually as initiatives of the places' citizens. After Warsaw, the radio was launched in Kraków on 15 February 1927, in Poznań on 29 April, in Katowice on 4 December, in Vilnius in 1928, and in L'viv and Łódź ...
It transmits the longwave signal of Polskie Radio Program I at 225 kHz frequency, after changing from 227 kHz in 1988. [2] It uses a directional aerial, consisting of a 330 metres (1,080 ft) high and a 289 metres (948 ft) high guyed grounded mast 330 metres apart. The taller mast is Poland's eighth highest structure. [1]