Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Instituto Mexicano de la Radio: 690 kHz XEN-AM: El Fonógrafo Barrio San Miguel Teotongo, CDMX 100 d / 5 n Grupo Radio Centro: 710 kHz XEMP-AM: Radio 710 El Vergel, CDMX 10 d / 1 n Instituto Mexicano de la Radio: 730 kHz XEX-AM: W Deportes Los Reyes Acaquilpan, Méx. 60 Radiópolis: 760 kHz XEABC-AM: Radio Cañón San Sebastián Chimalpa, Méx ...
Radio stations in the State of Mexico Call sign Frequency Location Owner Name Format XENK-AM: 620 AM San Andrés de La Cañada Radio M73 XENK, S. de R.L. de C.V. ESNE Radio, La Guadalupana Catholic XETUL-AM: 1080 AM Tultitlán Gobierno del Estado de México Mexiquense Radio Public radio XECHAP-AM: 1130 AM Texcoco Universidad Autónoma Chapingo
XEJP-AM (1150 kHz) is a commercial radio station in Mexico City. It is owned by Grupo Acustik and it airs a Regional Mexican radio format. By day, XEJP is powered at 20,000 watts. But to avoid interference to other stations on 1150 AM, it reduces power at night to 10,000 watts. It uses a non-directional antenna.
XEQR-FM broadcasts in HD and carries two subchannels, known as La Z on HD1 and Radio Centro XEQR-AM on its HD2 signal. [2] The transmitter is located atop a tower in La Mesa/Villa Alpina site at the outskirts west of Mexico City. XEQR-FM was Mexico's top-rated radio station from 1999 to 2017. [3]
Both initially carried Radio México Internacional, a service of the Instituto Mexicano de la Radio, but the Mazatlán station switched in 2019 to a simulcast of IMER's Reactor 105 in Mexico City; [21] They were joined on October 5, 2020, by XHTZA-FM in Coatzacoalcos and by XHSPRC-FM 102.9 in Colima on February 13, 2021; these stations carried ...
Broadcasting on 92.9 FM, XEQ-FM broadcasts grupera music under the name "La Ke Buena" and is the flagship of a network of stations with the same branding and format. The original concession was awarded on April 16, 1957 to Radio Mexicana del Centro, S.A. de C.V. [2] The transmitter is located atop World Trade Center Mexico City building.
This station would serve as the base for what would become Grupo Radio Centro, as "Radio Éxitos 790" and sister to 1030 AM XEQR-AM, known as "Radio Centro 1030". In the 1960s it became "La Campeona 7-90", a subname/slogan of "Radio Éxitos", a pioneer in broadcasting Spanish-language rock, but mostly airing then-current music in English from ...
Mexico City radio station stubs (18 P) Pages in category "Radio stations in Mexico City" The following 67 pages are in this category, out of 67 total.