KIAM-FM

KIAM-FM (91.9 FM) is a radio station licensed to serve North Nenana, Alaska. The station is owned by Voice For Christ Ministries, Inc. It airs a Religious radio format as part of the I AM Radio Network.[1]

KIAM-FM
CityNenana, Alaska
Frequency91.9 MHz
Programming
FormatReligious
Ownership
OwnerVoice For Christ Ministries, Inc.
Sister stationsKIAM (AM), KAGV, KYKD
Technical information
Facility ID174373
ClassC3
ERP950 watts
HAAT257 meters (843 ft)
Transmitter coordinates64°33′50″N 149°05′21″W
Links
WebcastListen Live
WebsiteKIAM-FM website

The station was assigned the KIAM-FM call letters by the Federal Communications Commission on February 26, 2008.[2]

Translators

Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseFacility
ID
ERP
(W)
Height
(m (ft))
ClassFCC info
K221AA92.1 MHzBettles, Alaska70439600214 m (702 ft)DFCC
K221DI92.1 MHzTanana, Alaska7044049027 m (89 ft)DFCC
K231BJ94.1 MHzEagle, Alaska139005250274 m (899 ft)DFCC
K232DM94.3 MHzAllakaket, Alaska138954250144 m (472 ft)DFCC
K232DV94.3 MHzAmbler, Alaska139014250108 m (354 ft)DFCC
K232DU94.3 MHzAnaktuvuk Pass, Alaska138968250647 m (2,123 ft)DFCC
K232DX94.3 MHzGrayling, Alaska13900825058 m (190 ft)DFCC
K232DK94.3 MHzHughes, Alaska139009250104 m (341 ft)DFCC
K232EV94.3 MHzIliamna, Alaska13901125057 m (187 ft)DFCC
K232DL94.3 MHzMcCarthy, Alaska139015250466 m (1,529 ft)DFCC
K232DZ94.3 MHzMcGrath, Alaska139016250108 m (354 ft)DFCC
K232DJ94.3 MHzPerryville, Alaska13901725020 m (66 ft)DFCC
K232ES94.3 MHzPort Alsworth, Alaska139018250123 m (404 ft)DFCC
K232DI94.3 MHzPrudhoe Bay, Alaska13901925025 m (82 ft)DFCC
K232DT94.3 MHzSand Point, Alaska13902125031 m (102 ft)DFCC
K241AB96.1 MHzRuby, Alaska7044125060 m (200 ft)DFCC
gollark: It is, because nobody actually needs to print `y\n` at 120GB/s. In fact, you're not even PRINTING it, just... counting and devnulling it.
gollark: They were able to reach 120GB/s, vs 120MB/s with the naive implementation or 12GB/s with the GNU yes one.
gollark: https://www.reddit.com/r/unix/comments/6gxduc/how_is_gnu_yes_so_fast/
gollark: The current state of the art in "printing constant text really fast" is probably contained in a reddit thread talking about the performance of GNU yes.
gollark: I actually know some stuff about this!

References

  1. "Station Information Profile". Arbitron. Archived from the original on 2010-03-01.
  2. "Call Sign History". FCC Media Bureau CDBS Public Access Database.


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