WSPF-CD

WSPF-CD, virtual channel 35 (UHF digital channel 38), is a low-powered América Tevé-affiliated television station serving Tampa, Florida, United States that is licensed to St. Petersburg. The station is owned by Prime Time Partners. WSPF-CD maintains studio facilities located on North Dale Mabry Highway in Tampa, and its transmitter located in Riverview, Florida.

WSPF-CD
St. Petersburg/Tampa, Florida
United States
CitySt. Petersburg, Florida
ChannelsDigital: 38 (UHF)
Virtual: 35 (PSIP)
BrandingAmérica Tevé Tampa
SloganSiempre Juntos
Programming
AffiliationsAmérica Tevé
Ownership
OwnerPrime Time Partners LLC
(sale to HC2 Holdings pending)
(WSPF-CA Station, LLC)
History
First air date1989 (1989)
Former call signsW35AJ (1989–1999)
WSPF-LP (1999–2001)
WSPF-CA (2001–2012)
Former channel number(s)Analog:
35 (UHF, 1989–2012)
Former affiliationsChannel America (1989–1995)
St. Petersburg city public access (1995–2012)
MundoFox/MundoMax (2013–2016)
Call sign meaningSt. Petersburg, Florida
Technical information
Licensing authorityFCC
Facility ID11559
ClassClass A
ERP15 kW
Transmitter coordinates27°49′46.0″N 81°15′59.0″W
Links
Public license informationProfile
LMS
Websitewww.wspf35.com

History

The station first signed on the air in 1989 as W35AJ, which originally operated as an owned-and-operated station of Channel America (in effect, becoming the first network-owned commercial station in the Tampa Bay market). However, the station was operated only intermittently, and would be off the air for weeks at a time. W35AJ was already dark for a couple of years when the St. Petersburg city government acquired the station in February 1995. Until that point, St. Petersburg's government-access television channel, first established in January 1990, was seen exclusively on cable television on cable channel 15 (since moved to digital channel 615 in December 2007). Prior to then, the city presented some programs on a local origination channel on Paragon Cable (since succeeded by Bright House Networks and Charter Communications).

Under the ownership of the City of St. Petersburg, the station broadcast City Council meetings and other public service programming for area residents, including the required three weekly hours of educational programming mandated by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC). In December 1999, the station's call letters were changed to WSPF-LP. It was eventually upgraded to Class A status, resulting in the callsign being modified to WSPF-CA in 2001.

On November 3, 2011, it was announced that the City of St. Petersburg was in discussions to sell WSPF-CA to Miami Lakes-based broadcast group Prime Time Partners; the company had placed a $500,000 bid to buy the station. Prime Time Partners immediately announced plans to convert the station to digital, with a Spanish-language service broadcasting on channel 35.1. The city announced that the station was up for sale in July 2011, due to the expense of converting the station to digital.[1] The sale to Prime Time Partners was approved by the FCC on May 29, 2012.

On or around June 30, 2012, WSPF-CA signed on its digital signal on UHF channel 38, the frequency formerly used by the analog signal of WTTA; ironically, the city of St. Petersburg founded the previous occupant of the channel 38 frequency, WSUN-TV, in 1953. In converting to digital operations, the station's call sign was modified to WSPF-CD. In addition, the station relocated its transmitter site to the antenna farm in Riverview. Shortly after digital transmissions began, WSPF-CD began broadcasting MundoFox (now MundoMax) on 35.1 and infomercials on 35.2 and 35.3. The city access channel, now known as StPeteTV, continues to be carried within the City of St. Petersburg on Bright House channel 641, WOW! channel 15 or Verizon FiOS channel 20, as well as online; it was originally announced that the city was offered a subchannel of WSPF-CD to continue carrying its city access channel terrestrially, though they ultimately chosen not to use it.[1]

On May 30, 2014, it was announced that WSPF-CD will be carried market-wide on Bright House for its digital cable subscribers, beginning August 1.[2]

Digital television

Digital channels

The station's digital channel is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[3]
35.1720p16:9WSPF-CDMain WSPF-CD programming / América TeVé
35.2480i4:3WSPF-D2No content - 100% color bars pattern
35.3WSPF-D3No content - 100% color bars pattern
35.4WSPF-SD4No content - 100% color bars pattern
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gollark: You get more side-product outputs for slightly more power/processing time.
gollark: Consider auxiliary sieves though. They're basically free apart from needing somewhat more pulverizers and power.
gollark: I guess if you're not really bottlenecked by ore input it's fine either way.
gollark: I see.

References

  1. St. Petersburg Times: "City's TV channel may have a buyer", November 4, 2011.
  2. Bright House Networks ad in Tampa Bay Times, May 30, 2014.
  3. RabbitEars TV Query for WSPF-CD
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