WKTQ (FM)

WKTQ is a Country formatted broadcast radio station licensed to Oakland, Maryland.

WKTQ
CityOakland, Maryland
Broadcast areaOakland, Maryland
Kingwood, West Virginia
Frequency92.3 MHz
Branding"92Q"
Slogan"Today's Best Country And Your All Time Favorites"
Programming
FormatCountry
AffiliationsWestwood One News
Ownership
OwnerBroadcast Communications II, Inc.
Sister stationsWKHJ-FM, WKTZ-FM, WMSG
History
First air date1966
Former call signsWMSG-FM (1966–1978)
WXIE (1978–1995)
WWHC (1995–2013)
WWHQ (2013–2016)
WKTQ-FM (7/2016-8/2016)
Technical information
ClassA
Power1,400 Watts
HAAT210 Meters
Transmitter coordinates39°26′41.0″N 79°31′42.0″W
Links
WebsiteWKTQ Online

Due to the high altitude of its tower, WKTQ's signal covers most of Garrett County, Maryland, most of neighboring Preston County, West Virginia, and parts of Tucker, Grant, and Mineral Counties in West Virginia. WKTQ is owned and operated by Broadcast Communications II, Inc.

History

WKTQ began as a simulcast of sister station WMSG in 1966. WMSG split from the simulcast in 1978 and became WXIE. The first format on WXIE was a soft adult contemporary format. In 1991, WXIE moved from 92.1 to 92.3 and became "92X" and began running a classic hits format. WXIE went dark in 1994.

In 1995, the frequency was acquired by Oakland Media Group, changed call letters to WWHC and began playing Country with the branding "Hot Country 92". Around 2000, 92.3 went through another name change, switching to "The Train" in reference to the railroad heritage that is found all over the region it serves.

On September 25, 2013, WWHC changed its callsign to WWHQ.[1] On July 7, 2016, the station changed its call sign from WWHQ to WKTQ-FM; the "-FM" suffix was dropped on August 8, 2016.[1]

Studios/tower

Studio in Loch Lynn Heights, Maryland

WKTQ's studios are on Lothian Street in Loch Lynn Heights, Maryland co-located with sister stations WMSG and WKHJ-FM and their tower is located above West Virginia Route 7 near Terra Alta, West Virginia.

Station sold

In July 2009, then-WWHC and sisters WKHJ and WMSG were sold for $830,000 to Radiowerks Broadcasting.[2]

In May 2011, WWHC and its sister stations were ordered into receivership by the Garrett County MD Circuit Court. John Culp was appointed as receiver. The Federal Communications Commission approved the transfer of the license on May 19, 2011.

The receivership sold WWHC and sister stations WKHJ and WMSG to Broadcast Communications II, Inc. The sale was effective July 1, 2013 at a purchase price of $775,000.

gollark: I made a 10-line background process in potatOS which does that.
gollark: ```json{ "isColor" : true, "label" : "P\/d���2U�G�z�]��ꢷ$�\u0004>#�(f!\u001B�7�֜K��~�Jņ�f�HZ��\u0011�\u00161��Y\u0010\u0005u\u0010<���D"}```is what `~/.craftos/config/0.json` contains, you see.
gollark: <@205756960249741312> Also, I got```terminate called after throwing an instance of 'Poco::JSON::JSONException' what(): JSON Exceptionfish: 'craftos' terminated by signal SIGABRT (Abort)```after installing PotatOS in CraftOS-PC. I think PotatOS's random-bytestring labels confuse it.
gollark: I mean, it allows arbitrary filesystem read/write access right now (restricted by OS permissions)...
gollark: Maybe also add an option to make all mounts read-only only?

See also

References

  1. Call Sign History of WKTQ
  2. Taylor, Tom (July 27, 2009). "Wheeling and Dealing". Taylor on Radio-Info. Radio-Info.com.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.