Ads
related to: low power fm radio station equipment for sale ohio by owner houston tx
Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Low-power FM (LPFM) radio stations in the U.S. state of Ohio. Pages in category "Low-power FM radio stations in Ohio" The following 32 pages are in this category, out of 32 total.
In New Zealand residents are allowed a broadcast license (free-of-charge) at a maximum of 1 watt EIRP in the FM guardbands from 87.6 to 88.3 and from 106.7 to 107.7 MHz under a General User Radio License (GURL), which is issued by Radio Spectrum Management, managed by the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.
A small nonprofit, Toledo Integrated Media Education (TIME), applied for a low-power FM license on the 106.1FM frequency in 2013. [1] After receiving approval to broadcast from the FCC, the organizers claimed the available call sign of WAKT and worked to assemble the appropriate funding, equipment, and permitting to begin broadcasting.
Low-power FM radio stations (LPFM) started broadcasting in the year 2000 after the FCC began licensing of 100 watt and 10 watt local community radio stations across the United States and its territories.
WDTZ-LP, better known by its brand name Z 98, is a low power FM radio station in the Cincinnati, Ohio market. It broadcasts mostly a '80s-based hit music format but has recently begun playing occasional ’70s & ’90s music. It is owned by Delhi Public Radio, Inc.
For much of its existence, WTTF-AM-FM was a 100 percent simulcast operation under the ownership of WTTF, Inc. This was highly unusual for a 50,000 watt FM station, with a signal that reached two other states (Michigan and Indiana), and a full-service news and talk-intensive format, even after WTTF had received nighttime power in the late 1980s ...
It briefly broadcast as a micropower radio service at 94.1 in the latter part of 2012 before a new "filing window" (the second of its kind) was announced by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to allow applications for new low power FM stations. The window was opened in the fall of 2013 and the owner promptly applied for a low-power FM ...
Seneca Radio Corporation, which was the station's original owner, had decided to sell WFOB-AM-FM in 1986. Tri-County Broadcasting, also known as TCB Holdings, purchased WFOB and its sister station, WBVI. TCB Chairman Donald P. Miller, was also president of Roppe Corporation, known for its rubber products, particularly for matting staircases in ...