WXNC

Radio station in Monroe, North Carolina From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

WXNC (1060 AM) is a commercial radio station in Monroe, North Carolina, serving the Charlotte metropolitan area. It broadcasts a Regional Mexican radio format, branded as “La Z” It is owned by Norsan Media. This station also simulcasts on WNOW 1030 AM

Quick Facts Broadcast area, Frequency ...
WXNC
Broadcast areaCharlotte metropolitan area
Frequency1060 kHz
BrandingLa Z 99.1 y 97.3 FM
Programming
FormatRegional Mexican
Ownership
Owner
  • Norsan Media
  • (Norsan Consulting and Management, Inc.)
WGSP, WGSP-FM, WNOW, WOLS
History
First air date
1947
Former call signs
WMAP (1947–1989)
WKRE (1989–2004)
WBTB (2004)
WXNC (2004–Present)
Call sign meaning
North Carolina
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID57451
ClassD
Power4,000 watts day
2,400 watts critical hours
Translator(s)97.3 W247CV (Monroe)
Repeater(s)1030 WNOW (Mint Hill)
Links
Public license information
Close

WXNC is a daytimer station. By day, WXNC is powered at 4,000 watts, using a non-directional antenna.[2] But because AM 1060 is a clear channel frequency reserved for Class A KYW Philadelphia and XECPAE Mexico City, WXNC must sign off at night to avoid interference. During critical hours, it is powered at 2,400 watts. Programming is heard around the clock on FM translator W247CV at 97.3 MHz.

History

In July 1947, the station first signed on the air as WMAP. It was a 1,000-watt station in Monroe, North Carolina. WMAP added an FM sister station at 102.3.[3] The FM station was later sold off, although today it is co-owned again and is WGSP-FM.

WXNC went dark in 1995. After a two-year absence, it came back as WKRE in March 1997.[4] The studios were later moved to Charlotte. The signal was increased to 5,000 watts.

As a Charlotte-based station, WXNC had a talk radio format known as The Conversation Station. The announcement was made that WXNC would also be heard on WKMT at 1220 AM, also owned by Kevin and Kris Geddings.[5]

Later, the Norsan Group, which already owned 1310 WGSP, bought WXNC, which soon changed to a Spanish language format and began its simulcast of the "La Tremenda" network with WGSP.[6] At one time WGSP-FM (formerly WRML) at 102.3 FM simulcast this station.[7]

References

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