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WXVA

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WXVA
Broadcast areaNorthern Shenandoah Valley
Frequency610 kHz
Branding102.9 Valley FM
Programming
Language(s)English
FormatClassic hits
Ownership
Owner
  • Edward A. Schober
  • (Winchester Radio Broadcasters, LLC)
History
First air date
January 27, 1961
(63 years ago)
 (1961-01-27)
Former call signs
  • WHPL (1961–82)
  • WVAI (1982–86)
  • WUSQ (1986–93)
  • WNTW (1993–2002)
  • WTFX (2002–09)
  • WLVE (2009–11)
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID4668
ClassB
Power
Transmitter coordinates
39°7′26.0″N 78°12′44.0″W / 39.123889°N 78.212222°W / 39.123889; -78.212222
Translator(s)102.9 W275BV (Winchester)
Links
Public license information

WXVA (610 AM) – branded as 102.9 Valley FM – is a classic hits formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Winchester, Virginia, serving the Northern Shenandoah Valley.[3] WXVA is owned and operated by Winchester Radio Broadcasters, LLC.[4]

History

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Edwin Fisher's Shenval Broadcasting Corporation signed on WHPL on January 27, 1961. The station was programmed with a mix of top-40 and modern country music to compete directly against the adult contemporary music of WINC (1400 AM). WHPL joined NBC on December 1, 1964.[5]

In 1966, Shenval signed on a companion FM station, WHPL-FM on 102.5. Unlike most co-owned AM-FM pairings of the time, this station was programmed independently from the start, and is now country WUSQ-FM.

Arthur H. Holt purchased the two stations from Shenval in 1982.[6] was flipped to adult standards under the callsign WVAI.[7] In 1986, it went back to adult contemporary as WUSQ[8] before switching again to a country simulcast of WUSQ-FM in 1990. Benchmark Communications purchased the two stations in 1991 and left the simulcast intact.[9][10] Three years later, the AM side changed to news-talk-sports WNTW with newscasts from CNN Radio.[11]

Benchmark sold all of its holdings to Capstar Broadcasting, then the largest station owner in the country, in 1997.[12] Capstar then merged with Chancellor Media to form AMFM, Inc. in 1999.[13] The new ownership brought a contemporary Christian music format on December 26, 1999.[14] Clear Channel bought AMFM in 2002, and instituted the new callsign WTFX and an all-sports format anchored by talk programming from Fox Sports Radio.[11]

In November 2008, Clear Channel sold the land on which the station's towers stood, leaving it without a transmitter site. Accordingly, WTFX went off air on November 17 and its transmitter was physically dismantled. The sports talk programming was immediately moved to WMRE (1550 AM), where it remains today.[11]

Clear Channel opted not to return the license while it sought a new transmitter site. The callsign WLVE (long associated with what is now WMIA-FM Miami) was "parked" on the license beginning in April 2009, in order not to lose control of the sign to another station operator. Low-powered transmissions resumed for a few days each November – by way of a wire strung up at WUSQ-FM's site – as the Telecommunications Act mandates automatic deletion of a station that is continuously silent for one year.[2] WLVE was later one of several moribund AM stations that made up a planned 2009 donation to the Washington, D.C. nonprofit Minority Media and Telecommunications Council; however, for unclear reasons, it is absent from later reports on the plan and never changed hands.[15]

Clear Channel eventually sold the license in 2011 to Ted Schober's Winchester Radio Broadcasters for $5,000.[16] By this time, the license was the only asset. The sale included no studio, transmitter site, or any "significant equipment", according to Schober.[17]

Winchester Radio rebuilt and launched in June 2011 a locally-oriented full service station with news, talk and eclectic variety music programming that ranged from the 1950s to the present. With the new ownership came the callsign WXVA, which had previously seen longtime use on 98.3 FM and 1550 AM in neighboring Charles Town.[18] The music was tweaked to classic hits, focusing on pop hits from the 1960s through 1980s, in February 2014.[19]

Winchester Radio purchased translator W275BV on November 5, 2014 from Starboard Media Foundation for $11,000.[20] The translator simulcasts WXVA on 102.9 FM, with a signal covering Frederick County.[21][22][23] The translator began broadcasting on May 4, 2015.

Emphasizing the identity of its translator, WXVA relaunched as "102.9 Valley FM" without any change to its music on March 27, 2017.[24]

Technical

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Nighttime operation

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WXVA is licensed for 380 watts non-directional during the day from a site due south of Winchester near Kernstown, Virginia. The station is also licensed for 500 watts directional at night, tightly oriented northwest-southeast to protect WTEL in Philadelphia, WTVN in Columbus, Ohio, and WPLY in Roanoke. This means a different transmitter site is required for night operation, as running the licensed night signal from the same location would not cover Winchester as required.[2] Since relaunching, Winchester Radio has not been able to find an adequate nighttime site. WXVA has operated nights under a succession of special temporary authorities at 125 watts non-directional from its daytime site.[25]

Translators

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Call sign Frequency City of license FID ERP (W) HAAT Class Transmitter coordinates FCC info
W221EQ 92.1 FM Front Royal, Virginia 202519 250 666 m (2,185 ft) D 38°57′36″N 78°19′51″W / 38.96000°N 78.33083°W / 38.96000; -78.33083 LMS
W275BV 102.9 FM Winchester, Virginia 144808 250 381 m (1,250 ft) D 39°11′02″N 78°23′14″W / 39.18389°N 78.38722°W / 39.18389; -78.38722 LMS

References

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  1. ^ "Facility Technical Data for WXVA". Licensing and Management System. Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^ a b c "WXVA Facility Data". FCCData.
  3. ^ "Arbitron Station Information Profiles". Nielsen Audio/Nielsen Holdings. Retrieved February 8, 2014.
  4. ^ "WXVA Facility Record". Federal Communications Commission, audio division. Retrieved February 1, 2014.
  5. ^ Staff (December 14, 1964). "New voice" (PDF). Broadcasting. p. 53.
  6. ^ Staff (March 1, 1982). "Changing hands" (PDF). Broadcasting. p. 107.
  7. ^ Broadcasting/Cablecasting Yearbook 1983 (PDF). p. B-258.
  8. ^ Broadcasting/Cablecasting Yearbook 1987 (PDF). p. B-302.
  9. ^ Staff (May 20, 1991). "For the record" (PDF). Broadcasting. p. 76.
  10. ^ Broadcasting and Cable Marketplace 1992 (PDF). p. A-371.
  11. ^ a b c Hughes, Dave (November 17, 2008). "Winchester's 610 Goes Dark, Sports To 1550". DCRTV.
  12. ^ Staff (January 20, 1997). "Changing hands" (PDF). Broadcasting. p. 42.
  13. ^ "Chancellor Media And Capstar Broadcasting To Merge, Creating Nation's Largest Radio Broadcasting Company With Enterprise Value Of More Than $17 billion". Business Wire. 1998-08-27. Retrieved 2011-11-03.
  14. ^ Hughes, Dave (December 26, 1999). "WNTW Goes Religious". DCRTV.
  15. ^ "Clear Channel Sells Virginia AM". All Access. January 3, 2011.
  16. ^ Hughes, Dave (January 3, 2011). "[Clear Channel is selling the license...]". DCRTV.
  17. ^ Schober, Edward (30 March 2011). "Engineering Report, Request For Special Temporary Authority". Letter to Federal Communications Commission.
  18. ^ Hughes, Dave (June 20, 2011). "Winchester's 610 Returns to Airwaves". DCRTV.
  19. ^ Hughes, Dave (February 9, 2014). "Winchester's WXVA Flips to Classic Hits, To Add FMer". DCRTV.
  20. ^ "Asset Purchase Agreement, W275BV". Federal Communications Commission, audio division. August 20, 2014. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
  21. ^ "W275BV Facility Record". Federal Communications Commission, audio division. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
  22. ^ "Application for Transfer of Control of a Corporate Licensee or Permittee, or for Assignment of License or Permit for a TV or FM translator station or Low Power Television Station". Federal Communications Commission, audio division. August 20, 2014. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
  23. ^ "60 dBu Service Contour for W275BV, 102.9 MHz, Winchester, VA". Federal Communications Commission, audio division. Retrieved November 7, 2014.
  24. ^ Venta, Lance (March 27, 2017). "WXVA Relaunches As 102.9 Valley-FM". RadioBB Networks. Retrieved March 27, 2017.
  25. ^ Schober, Edward (27 March 2017). "Engineering Report, Request For Special Temporary Authority". Letter to Federal Communications Commission.
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