KCOR-CD

KCOR-CD, virtual channel 34 (UHF digital channel 27), is a low-powered, Class A television station licensed to San Antonio, Texas, United States that is currently silent. The station is owned by the Univision Local Media subsidiary of Univision Communications. KCOR-CD's transmitter is located on César E. Chavéz Bouelvard in downtown San Antonio.

KCOR-CD
San Antonio, Texas
United States
ChannelsDigital: 27 (UHF)
Virtual: 34 (PSIP)
Programming
AffiliationsSilent
Ownership
OwnerUnivision Communications Inc.
(UniMas Partnership of San Antonio)
History
First air dateMarch 23, 1988 (March 23, 1988)
Former call signsK17BY (1988-1997)
KNIC-LP (1997-2001)
KNIC-CA (2001-2015)
KNIC-CD (2015-2019)
Former channel number(s)Analog:
17 (1991-2012)
34 (2012-2015)
Digital:
34 (2015-2019)
Former affiliationsTelefutura (2002–2006)
Call sign meaningformer call sign of KXTN and KWEX-DT, which were founded by Raoul A. CORtez
Technical information
Licensing authorityFCC
Facility ID48837
ERP15 kW
HAAT157.85 m (518 ft)
Transmitter coordinates29°25′6″N 98°29′32″W
Links
Public license informationProfile
LMS

History

The station began as a construction permit issued to Clear Channel Communications on March 23, 1988 to build a low-power television station on UHF channel 17 in San Antonio. Given callsign K17BY, the station went on air in March 1991 and was licensed April 2, 1991. Also in March 1991, Clear Channel agreed to sell the station to Nicolas Communications, who assumed full control several weeks later. In November 1997, the station took call letters KNIC-LP, named after its owners, and in November 2001, the station upgraded to a Class A license, changing its call letters to KNIC-CA. Also in November, Nicolas Communications and Univision reached an agreement for Univision to buy the station, and the transaction was consummated in January 2002, just in time for the launch of Univision's new network, Telefutura. KNIC-CA affiliated with the new network and simulcast its programming on KFTO-LP (now KFTO-CA).

Univision had been an applicant since 2000 for a full-service television station on UHF channel 52 in Blanco, and after winning the auction to build the station, they requested that the FCC change the allocation from channel 52 to channel 17. The FCC granted the request, to be effective in February 2003 . In their formal application to build the full-service station, to be called KNIC-TV, Univision declared their intent to either move KNIC-CA to another channel, or to shut it down altogether (p. 4). In September 2006, with KNIC-TV about to go on-the-air, Univision requested an STA to move KNIC-CA to channel 34. The FCC granted the STA, and KNIC-CA channel 17 went silent on September 28, 2006.

In moving to channel 34, KNIC-CA disrupted plans for digital operations for three other local television stations: KMHZ-LP, KVDF-CA and KEVI-LP. The stations had competing applications to build a low-power digital television facilities on channel 34, but Class A displacements have priority over other low-power applications not caused by displacement (paragraph (a)(4)(iii)). A displacement occurs when a higher-priority station forces a lower-priority station to change its broadcast channel. Full-service KNIC-TV had priority over Class A low-power KNIC-CA, so KNIC-CA was displaced.

Digital television

KNIC-CA was allowed to continue broadcasting its analog signal following February 18, 2009, which was the end of the digital TV conversion period for full-service stations, since it is a licensed Class A low power television station and has certain interference protection rights.[1] The station was licensed for digital operation on channel 34 on June 3, 2015, and changed its call sign to KNIC-CD.

After the 2016-2017 FCC TV spectrum auction, KNIC-CD will need to move from RF channel 34 to RF channel 27 for testing starting in April 2019. The switch is to be complete by June 21, 2019 [2]

The station changed its call sign to KCOR-CD on April 5, 2019.

gollark: Hyperbolic geometry esolang which is actually 2D and not 3D?
gollark: You could use AVIFs/APNGs/whatever, and make it run off images like piet, except it's image sequences interpreted as 3D instead.
gollark: Oh, well, in that case, new esolang opportunity?
gollark: I figure you could either project it from a 2D grid, or feed it multiple layers of text file/image.
gollark: ÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆ

References

  1. The DTV Transition and LPTV/Class A/Translator Stations
  2. FCC TV spectrum Phase Assignment Table, FCC Incentive Auction Television Transition Data Files, April 13, 2017.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.