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Channel 3 took on secondary affiliations with NBC and ABC until Charlotte's second VHF station, WSOC-TV (channel 9), took the NBC affiliation when it signed on in April 1957. Channel 36 returned to the air in November 1964 as WCCB (later moving to channel 18 in November 1966), carrying whatever CBS programs that WBTV turned down in order to ...
PBS on 27.2, PBS Kids on 27.3, The North Carolina Channel on 27.4 Asheville: 33 20 WUNF-TV: PBS: satellite of WUNC-TV ch. 4 Chapel Hill PBS Kids on 33.2, The Explorer Channel on 33.3, The North Carolina Channel on 33.4 62 11 WYCW: CW: Rewind TV on 62.3 Charlotte metropolitan area: Charlotte: 3 23 WBTV: CBS: Bounce TV on 3.2, Circle on 3.3, Grit ...
The station first signed on the air on April 28, 1957, [2] as Charlotte's third television station, after WBTV (channel 3) and WAYS-TV (channel 36, later WQMC-TV); it was also Charlotte's second station on the VHF band. It operated from a temporary facility on Plaza Road Extension in what was then a rural portion of eastern Mecklenburg County.
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The NASCAR Cup Series season continues to Charlotte Motor Speedway with the Coca-Cola 600. How to watch qualifying, including time, TV schedule, streaming info.
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The station signed on December 22, 1953, and aired an analog signal on VHF channel 9. It is the fourth-oldest continuously operating television station in North Carolina (behind Charlotte's WBTV, Greensboro's WFMY-TV, and Winston-Salem's WXII-TV) and the oldest station in the eastern part of the state.