WWPX-TV

WWPX-TV, virtual channel 60 (VHF digital channel 13), is an Ion Television owned-and-operated station licensed to Martinsburg, West Virginia, United States and serving the northwestern portion of the Washington, D.C. television market.[1] The station is owned by West Palm Beach, Florida-based Ion Media Networks. WWPX-TV's transmitter is located on Blue Ridge Mountain east of Charles Town, West Virginia.

WWPX-TV
Satellite of WPXW-TV,
Manassas, Virginia/Washington, D.C.
Martinsburg, West Virginia/
Hagerstown, Maryland/
Winchester, Virginia
United States
CityMartinsburg, West Virginia
ChannelsDigital: 13 (VHF)
Virtual: 60 (PSIP)
BrandingIon Television
SloganPositively Entertaining
Programming
Affiliations60.1: Ion Television (O&O)
60.2: Qubo
60.3: Ion Plus
60.4: Ion Shop
60.5: HSN
60.6: QVC
Ownership
OwnerIon Media Networks
(Ion Media Martinsburg License, Inc.)
Sister stationsWPXW-TV
History
FoundedMay 21, 1990
First air dateOctober 1, 1991 (1991-10-01)
Former call signsWYVN (1991–1996)
WSHE-TV (1996–1998)
Former channel number(s)Analog:
60 (UHF, 1991–2009)
Digital:
12 (VHF, 2009–2020)
Former affiliationsFox (1991–1993)
Independent (1993–1994)
Dark (1994–1996)
inTV (1996–1998)
Call sign meaningWest Virginia's PaX; satellite of WPXW-TV
Technical information
Licensing authorityFCC
Facility ID23264
ClassDT
ERP4.2 kW
HAAT327.5 m (1,074 ft)
Transmitter coordinates39°14′21″N 77°46′16″W
Links
Public license informationProfile
LMS
Websiteiontelevision.com

WWPX-TV operates as a full-time satellite of the main Ion station for the Washington area, Manassas, Virginia-licensed WPXW-TV (channel 66), whose studios are located in Fairfax Station, Virginia. WWPX covers areas of West Virginia's Eastern Panhandle, northern Virginia, central Maryland and south-central Pennsylvania that receive a marginal to non-existent over-the-air signal from WPXW, although there is significant overlap between the two stations' contours otherwise. WWPX is a straight simulcast of WPXW; on-air references to WWPX are limited to Federal Communications Commission (FCC)-mandated hourly station identifications during programming. Aside from the transmitter, WWPX does not maintain any physical presence locally in Martinsburg.

History

Channel 60 signed on October 1, 1991 as WYVN ("Your Valley News"), with studios located in a renovated barn on Discovery Place in Martinsburg. WYVN was the second Fox affiliate in West Virginia, behind Charleston's WVAH-TV. Unusually for Fox stations in the network's early years, WYVN made a commitment from the beginning to local news and public affairs programming.[2] However, owner Flying A Communications found itself in financial trouble due to the cost of the local news operation and poor ratings from competition with Washington, D.C.-based stations. In addition to this, the station was beset by technical issues; its signal would go back and forth between black and white and color. A Fox network employee was reportedly sent to Martinsburg to investigate this matter, and was appalled by the sight of the station running The Simpsons episode "Lisa the Beauty Queen" in black and white; management responded by saying "we don't even have an engineer."[3] Flying A Communications filed for bankruptcy in October 1992, and the station suspended newscasts in May 1993.[4]

WYVN was forced off the air when Flying A went into receivership on September 17, 1993. A sale to WUSQ-FM owner Benchmark Communications, who would have converted the station to CBS affiliate WUSQ-TV, was worked out and approved by the station's bankruptcy trustee, but fell through at the last minute; the license was instead sold to Green River Broadcasting, who returned the station to air on September 24 while it worked out a financing plan.[5][6] Having lost its Fox affiliation, WYVN soldiered on as an independent, and briefly attempted a return of local news from January through February 1994.[7][8] The station remained unable to emerge from bankruptcy; the studio and equipment were sold to its creditors April 1, 1994, and they locked out the staff and suspended broadcasting.[6] Paxson Communications acquired the license out of bankruptcy for $1.9 million in late 1994.[9]

The station returned again on September 1, 1996, as WSHE-TV, a Paxson station that aired the company's standard infomercial format, with religious programming in some dayparts. The station changed its call letters to WWPX at the beginning of 1998 and became a charter member of Pax TV along with most of Paxson's other stations on August 31 of that year. It has remained with the network, later known as i: Independent Television and now known as Ion Television, ever since.

WWPX was originally a full affiliate of Pax. In 2002, it converted to a satellite of WPXW. The station could no longer afford its own staff of five master-control operators, and becoming a satellite allowed it to carry only the legal minimum of one manager and one engineer.[10]

Digital television

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming
60.1720p16:9IONIon Television
60.2480i4:3quboQubo
60.3IONPlusIon Plus
60.4ShopIon Shop
60.5HSNHSN
60.6QVCQVC

[11]

Analog-to-digital conversion

WWPX-TV shut down its analog signal, over UHF channel 60, on June 12, 2009, the official date in which full-power television stations in the United States transitioned from analog to digital broadcasts under federal mandate. The station's digital signal remained on its pre-transition VHF channel 12.[12] Through the use of PSIP, digital television receivers display the station's virtual channel as its former UHF analog channel 60, which was among the high band UHF channels (52-69) that were removed from broadcasting use as a result of the transition.

gollark: I don't know what you mean by "prunes routes", but you can manually configure peers and it autodetects others on the local network via multicast.
gollark: <@474726021652807680> I'm pretty sure, based on reading the docs there and not their code or anything, not any of those.
gollark: Perhaps the GPU does not entirely work.
gollark: I assume this is the computer you recovered from beside a river, so who knows *what's* up with that.
gollark: It's quite hard to tell, yes.

References

  1. Hughes, Dave. "Washington DC/Baltimore Area TV Stations". dcrtv.com. Archived from the original on May 19, 2006. Retrieved May 21, 2006.
  2. "Martinsburg gets new TV station". Frederick News-Post. Associated Press. 2 October 1991. p. D-7.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2018-10-14. Retrieved 2018-10-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. "W.Va. Judge Approves Sale of TV Station to Kentucky Company". Associated Press. 11 October 1993.
  5. "Trustee recommends WYVN-TV sale". Frederick News-Post. Associated Press. 2 September 1993. p. B-2.
  6. "Lights out at Martinsburg, W. Va., TV station". Frederick News-Post. Associated Press. 6 April 1994. p. B-7.
  7. "WWPX-TV Facility Data". FCCData.
  8. "West Virginia Station Suspends News Programming". Associated Press. 16 February 1994.
  9. "TV station purchased". Cumberland Times-News. Associated Press. November 29, 1994. p. 2B. Retrieved June 17, 2020.
  10. Greene, Julie (1 February 2002). "Financial woes hit area TV stations". Hagerstown Herald-Mail. Archived from the original on 26 April 2018. Retrieved 25 April 2018.
  11. "RabbitEars TV Query for WWPX". Archived from the original on 2014-02-22. Retrieved 2014-02-06.
  12. "DTV Tentative Channel Designation for the First and the Second Rounds" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2013-08-29. Retrieved 2012-03-24.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.