WHRM (FM)

WHRM (90.9 FM) is a radio station licensed to Wausau, Wisconsin, serving the Wausau/Stevens Point area. The station is part of Wisconsin Public Radio (WPR), and airs WPR's "NPR News and Classical Network", consisting of classical music and news and talk programming. WHRM also broadcasts regional news and programming from studios in the Center for Civic Engagement at the University of Wisconsin-Marathon County in Wausau.

WHRM
CityWausau, Wisconsin
Broadcast areaWausau/Stevens Point
Frequency90.9 MHz (HD Radio)
Programming
FormatPublic radio, Classical music, News
AffiliationsWisconsin Public Radio, NPR, American Public Media
Ownership
OwnerWisconsin Educational Communications Board
(State of Wisconsin - Educational Communications Board)
History
First air date1949
Former call signsWHSF (1949-?)
Call sign meaningWHA Rib Mountain (local landmark/transmitter site)
Technical information
Facility ID63083
ClassC0
ERP82,000 watts
HAAT329 meters (1,079 ft)
Repeater(s)W267BB (101.3), Wausau (translating WHRM-HD3)
Links
WebcastStream
WebsiteWisconsin Public Radio

The station signed on as WHSF, the fourth FM station in what would become Wisconsin Public Radio.

HD Radio

WRHM airs Ideas Network programming on its third HD Radio subchannel–the first such arrangement in the WPR network. This is because most of north-central Wisconsin does not have a clear 24-hour signal from the Ideas Network. Sister station WLBL-AM in Auburndale must reduce its power to an all-but unlistenable level at night, while WLBL-FM in Wausau is maintained under a time-share arrangement with WXPW which splits that signal's time among the two organizations. In September 2017, the WHRM-HD3 signal began to be translated full-time as an analog signal over W267BB (101.3) in the Wausau area.

The network's HD2 Classical Service is aired on WHRM-HD2.

gollark: And if you're in (the) (Ant)[Aa]rctic(a), you run into similar problems because of the broken daynight cycle.
gollark: And prayers take place at certain times of day, which of course causes problems with no real day/night cycle available.
gollark: For example, you are required to pray facing the Mecca. How do you do this while in orbit of Earth? You need some sort of complex gyroscopic chair to face you in the right direction.
gollark: Islam is one of the less cool religions, because it adapts poorly to space travel.
gollark: GNU/Nobody is apparently a Muslim, if you're curious.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.