KODS

KODS is a commercial radio station licensed to Carnelian Bay, California, broadcasting to the Reno, Nevada and Lake Tahoe areas on 103.7 FM. KODS airs a classic hits music format branded as "The River" (a local reference to the Truckee River). The station's studios are located on Matley Lane in East Reno, and its transmitter is located on Slide Mountain.

KODS
CityCarnelian Bay, California
Broadcast areaReno, Nevada
Frequency103.7 MHz
Branding103.7 The River
Slogan"#1 For Rock & Roll Oldies"
Programming
FormatClassic Hits
Ownership
OwnerReno Media Group
History
First air date1970 (as KNLT at 101.7)
Former call signsKNLT (1970-1974)
KSML (1974-1977)
KEZC (1977-1983)
KHTX (1983-1987)
KHTZ (1987-1988)
Former frequencies101.7 MHz (1970-1984)
Technical information
Facility ID2103
ClassC1
ERP6,300 watts
HAAT910 meters (2,990 ft)
Translator(s)See below
Links
Websiteriver1037.com

History

The station, now owned by Reno Media Group, began as KNLT in 1970 with a transmitter on Brockway Summit, between Truckee, CA and Lake Tahoe. Its signal could be heard only in Truckee and in a small section of Tahoe's north shore, including Kings Beach and Carnelian Bay. Tom Quinn and a handful of investors purchased the station, then known as KEZC, in 1982. Within two years, Quinn petitioned the FCC to increase the station's power and he relocated the transmitter to Slide Mountain overlooking Reno, Carson City and Lake Tahoe. The station, with new call-letters KTHX and known as "K-Hits 104," had instant ratings success in the Reno radio market. This allowed Quinn to purchase a second station serving the Fresno, California area and then a third in Las Vegas, Nevada. In September 1988, KHTZ, as the station had become known the previous year, changed format from Top 40 to oldies and its call letters to KODS.[1] In doing so, the station regained its position as the top-rated station in Reno. In the late 1990s, KODS began using the nickname "The River" and in Incline Village the nickname "Fun 101" reflecting its use of a translator at 101.3 FM. Except during specialty programs, KODS eventually dropped most of its 1950s and early 1960s music and thus transitioned to a classic hits rather than oldies format.

KODS is now part of the nine-station Reno Media Group/Americom family of stations.

Translators

KODS also broadcasts on the following FM translators:

Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseERP
(W)
ClassFCC info
K267AA101.3Incline Village, Nevada46DFCC
K285EK104.9Battle Mountain, Nevada19DFCC
K293CA106.5Carson City, Nevada250DFCC
gollark: I mean, "XTMF with CBOR/msgpack and compression" was being considered as a hypothetical "XTMF2", but I'd definitely want something, well, self-describing.
gollark: Also also, why a binary format?
gollark: Also, XTMF can do runtime update, you just need to allocate, say, 4KB at the start of the tape, and write metadata to that. The offsets might be fiddly, though.
gollark: You should probably not do that.
gollark: <@458991393160036354> No idea if there's an actual *limit*, but probably try to avoid using more than a few megabytes.

References

  1. DeChick, Joe (1988-10-20). "Reno-Sparks radio ratings find lots to Z about". Reno Gazette-Journal. p. 2D. Retrieved 2018-05-17 via Newspapers.com.


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