3YB FM

3YB FM is a radio broadcaster based in Warrnambool, Victoria, Australia. It transmits on the frequency modulation radio band, at a frequency of 94.5 MHz. The station is part of the Ace Radio FM network. It has an adult contemporary music format mixed with talk such as Mornings with Neil Mitchell syndicated from 3AW.

3YB FM
CityWarrnambool
Broadcast areaSouth coast of Victoria
Frequency94.5 MHz
SloganBetter Music and More of it.
Programming
Language(s)English
Format70's to current music, news, talk, sport
Ownership
OwnerACE Radio Broadcasters Pty Ltd
Sister stationsCoast FM
History
Former frequencies882 kHz AM (19782018)
Call sign meaning3 = Victoria
Young of Ballarat (see History of broadcasting)
Links
Website3yb.com.au

The station has one of the most unusual histories of any Australian radio station, having commenced broadcasting in 1931 as a mobile station, prior to permanently settling in Warrnambool in 1935.

History

The 1930s: Mobile Station, and the move to Warrnambool

Between October 1931 and November 1935 3YB was a mobile station, broadcasting around Victoria in areas that did not yet have local stations. In 1931, the only stations in rural Victoria were: 3BA Ballarat, 3TR Trafalgar, 3GL Geelong, 3WR Wangaratta, and 3BO Bendigo.[1] It broadcast first from a Ford car and Ford truck, and later from a railway carriage originally built for the 1899 Royal Train, first used for the 1901 visit of Prince George, Duke of Cornwall and York, and the Duchess.[2][3] 3YB's founder was Vic Dinenny[4] but the concept of the station was the brain-child of one the station's original broadcasters and engineers Jack Young of Ballarat, after whom the station is named.

The mobile station had a limited power of 25 watts, meaning that it could only be heard in a small regional area at any given time.

The way the station operated was that it would move into a selected town for three weeks. The first week was occupied with setting up the station, particularly the broadcasting mast and other technical gear. Concurrently, local businesses were visited and advertising was sold, although Dinenny also secured a few national advertisers. During the second and third weeks the station broadcast daily from 6.00 to 10.00 pm. The record library was divided into 14 complete programs, ensuring that there was no repetition of records during the two weeks that the station broadcast from a town. The first town to be visited, in October 1931, was Creswick.[1]

Warrnambool radio pioneer Oscar V. Henry; technician and manager Harry S. Fuller; and salesperson Sid Kemp were also important to the beginnings of 3YB.[5]

As more and more rural stations opened in Victoria, the concept of a mobile station became less practical. Therefore, Dinenny applied for and received licences for two non-mobile (or conventional) stations, one in Warrnambool and the other in Warragul. The opening of the Warrnambool station, which retained the call sign 3YB, was due to take place on 27 December 1935 but, due to problems with the transmission tower, the opening was postponed to 8.00 pm on Saturday 18 January 1936.[5]

Ownership

Within a few years of moving to Warrnambool, 3YB became part of the Argus Broadcasting Services network, along with 3UL Warragul and 3SR Shepparton.[6] This Victorian rural radio network was operated by The Argus, then a daily newspaper. When The Argus closed in January 1957, their radio network evolved into the Associated Broadcasting Company which owned 3YB until it was sold to Regional Communications Pty Ltd in 1982, and then, in 1990 the station was purchased by two private shareholders.[7] The current operators, Ace Radio Broadcasters [8] purchased 3YB in 1995.

In the late 1980s/1990s and into the early 21st century, the Australian Broadcasting Tribunal embarked on a policy of increasing the number of regional radio stations, particularly on the FM band by inviting existing AM stations to start a second station, serving the same market. Some stations chose to start a brand new FM station, whilst others elected to move their existing station to the FM band, whilst also starting a new AM station on their former wavelength. 3YB fell into the former category, with its sister station, 3YFM (broadcasting as 95.3 Coast FM) commencing operations on 14 August 2002. However, as from 2 July 2018, 3YB has also broadcast on the FM band (see below).

Studios

The first 3YB studio in Warrnambool (and its first permanent studio) was at the property Wentworth on Weir Road. On 16 April 1945 there was a disastrous fire at the studio and transmitter complex at Wentworth, and 3YB was forced off the air for three weeks! On 5 May 1945 the station re-opened, broadcasting from new studios on the 1st floor of the T & G building on the corner of Leibig and Lava Streets. This studio served the station well until August 1968 when new purpose-built studios were opened at 95 Timor Street.[5]

Broadcasters

Many prominent broadcasters commenced their careers at 3YB. These include: Ron Cadee, Vern Haycroft, Denzil Howson, Rod Kilgour, Barry Seeber, Rod Spargo, Michael Taft, and Mal Walden.[5][9]

Long serving news presenter Lois Chislett has won a number of Australian Commercial Radio Awards for best news presenter for a country station including in 2012 [10]

On-Air Schedule

Weekdays

  • 12:00am-5:30am - Only The Hits You Love
  • 5:30am-6:00am - Country Today
  • 6:00am-8:30am - The Morning Rush with Sean Cullen & Kate Meade
  • 8:30am-12:00pm - Neil Mitchell
  • 12:00pm-1:00pm - Great South Coast Today with Denis Napthine (Friday)
  • 12:00pm-6:00pm - Only The Hits You Love
  • 6:00pm-8:00pm - Sportsday
  • 6:00pm-12:00am - AFL (Friday)
  • 8:00pm-12:00am - Only The Hits You Love

Saturdays

  • 12:00am-7:00am - Only The Hits You Love
  • 7:00am-8:00am - Reel Adventures
  • 8:00am-9:00am - Sports Saturday
  • 9:00am-10:00am - 3YB Racing Panel
  • 10:00am-12:00pm - Off The Bench
  • 12:00pm-2:00pm - Only The Hits You Love
  • 2:00pm-9:00pm - AFL Nation
  • 9:00pm-12:00am - Only The Hits You Love

Sundays

  • 12:00am-8:00am - Only The Hits You Love
  • 8:00am-10:00am - Sports Sunday
  • 8:00am-2:00pm - Only The Hits You Love
  • 2:00pm-4:30pm - AFL Nation
  • 4:30pm-6:30pm - Only The Hits You Love
  • 6:30pm-9:00pm - AFL Nation
  • 9:00pm-12:00am - Down Memory Lane[11]

Move to FM

On 2 July 2018, 882 3YB converted to the FM band by swapping frequencies with Vision Australia Radio's Warrnambool station. It will now be known as 94.5 3YBFM. [12] [13]

gollark: There are a bunch of things I could *try*, but they have the potential to... break things more.
gollark: So this thing's stock room boots fine, but I have no idea how or why.
gollark: There seem to be some things missing.
gollark: ```Armor_X5_Q:/ $ ls /dev/block/platform/bootdevice/by-name/ boot cache expdb frp gz2 lk2 md1img metadata nvdata otp persist preloader_b protect1 recovery scp2 seccfg sspm_1 super tee2 vbmeta vbmeta_vendor boot_para dtbo flashinfo gz1 lk logo md_udc nvcfg nvram para preloader_a proinfo protect2 scp1 sec1 spmfw sspm_2 tee1 userdata vbmeta_system ```
gollark: So I tried flashing a generic system image from fastboot. Guess what? Apparently the system partition doesn't exist. That cannot possibly be standard-compliant.

References

  1. R. R. Walker, The Magic Spark, Hawthorn Press, 1973
  2. 3YB was born on wheels The Argus 9 May 1953 page 7
  3. Radio Station 3YB Newsrail May 1985 pages 132-134
  4. Watt, Jarrod (11 May 2013). "Ballarat heritage: broadcasting pioneers of radio and television". www.abc.net.au.
  5. Hugh Adams, 3YB: Pioneer of Country Broadcasting 1931-1981, Collett, Rain & Gaspar, Warrnambool, 1981
  6. "The "Argus" Broadcasting Services". tdgq.com.au.
  7. "History: Jimmy rocking the Bay". The Standard. 22 October 2015.
  8. "Ace Radio Broadcasters". www.aceradio.com.au.
  9. talk given by Michael Taft at U3A Deepdene, Melbourne, during which he showed photos of his time at 3YB
  10. "ACE boss on the ACRA's". Radio Today. 15 October 2012.
  11. "882 3YB".
  12. "3YB and Vision Australia swap radio bands". 2 July 2018. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
  13. "Vision Australia radio ready to make the big switch". 2 July 2018. Retrieved 4 July 2018.

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