WTAW (AM)
This article possibly contains original research. (June 2015) |
Broadcast area | Brazos Valley |
---|---|
Frequency | 1620 KHz (HD Radio) |
Branding | News Talk 1620 |
Programming | |
Format | Talk |
Affiliations | CBS Radio News, Premiere Radio Networks, Westwood One |
Ownership | |
Owner |
|
KNDE, KZNE, KWBC, KAGC, WTAW-FM, KPWJ, KKEE | |
History | |
First air date | May 3, 2000 |
Former call signs | KAZW (1998-2000; CP) KZNE (2000) |
Call sign meaning | Watch The Aggies Win |
Technical information | |
Facility ID | 87145 |
Class | B |
Power | 10,000 watts day 1,000 watts night |
Translator(s) | K233DU (94.5 MHz, College Station) |
Links | |
Webcast | Listen live |
Website | Official website |
WTAW (1620 kHz, Newstalk 1620) is a commercial AM radio station in College Station, Texas, United States. It is owned by the Bryan Broadcasting Company through its licensee, the Bryan Broadcasting License Corporation, and it features a talk radio format.[1] Studios and offices are located in the Crystal Park Plaza just off of the General James Earl Rudder Highway (Texas State Highway 6) in College Station.[2] The transmitter is off Bird Pond Road, also in College Station.[3]
Weekdays begin with a local news and information show, The Infomaniacs. The rest of the schedule is made up of syndicated talk shows from Rush Limbaugh, Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck, Joe Pags, Clyde Lewis, Coast to Coast AM with George Noory and This Morning, America's First News with Gordon Deal. Weekends feature shows on money, health, real estate, travel, gardening, golf and technology. Weekend hosts include Kim Komando, Dr. Michio Kaku, Lars Larson, Bob Brinker and Bill Cunningham. Most hours begin with news from CBS Radio News.
History
WTAW is one of the oldest radio stations in Texas. It received its broadcast license on October 7, 1922.[4] Before 1923, radio stations in Texas were given call signs beginning with a W, so WTAW is one of a handful still around to this day, while most Texas stations now have call letters starting with a K.
WTAW was started as an experimental station by the Texas Agricultural College (now Texas A&M University). It was one of the first radio stations to air a live football game in real time. For the history of its experimental days, see below. For much of its early decades, WTAW was a non-commercial station owned by the college. It spent some of its early years broadcasting on AM 1120, powered at 500 watts and sharing time with other stations.[5] In the 1940s, it switched to AM 1150. It no longer had to share time with other stations but it was still limited as a 1,000 watt daytimer, required to be off the air at night.
In 1957, WTAW became a commercial station, owned by a company calling itself WTAW Broadcasting.[6] In 1962, it added an FM station, 92.1 WTAW-FM, which allowed WTAW's country music format to be heard around the clock, since AM 1150 was still a daytimer. But by the 1970s, WTAW-FM had switched to an automated Top 40 format, while the AM station continued with its country sound.
In 1973 Bill Watkins, station manager and owner, hired Sunny Nash to anchor drive-time morning news. The country station’s first African American reporter and talk-show host, Nash was a Texas A&M University student, who became the first African American journalism graduate in the school’s history in 1977, and later a syndicated newspaper columnist and author of Bigmama Didn't Shop At Woolworth's.
In the 1980s, WTAW was authorized by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to broadcast at night, with 500 watts, while daytime power remained at 1,000 watts.[7] As country music listening shifted to FM, WTAW began adding talk shows at night. Eventually the station converted to a full-time talk outlet in the 1990s.
In the 1990s, the FCC expanded the AM band from 1600 kHz to 1700 kHz. A new AM station for College Station was assigned at AM 1620. The current license at 1620 AM was first given the call letters KAZW on January 9, 1998. On March 1, 2000, the station's call sign changed to KZNE.[8] On May 3, 2000, WTAW and KZNE flipped call letters, with WTAW's talk format and call sign moving to AM 1620, while KZNE signed on AM 1150 with an all-sports radio format. Due to the way the transaction was structured legally, KZNE operates under WTAW's original license, while the current WTAW facility is a new license. The move allowed WTAW to boost its daytime power to 10,000 watts and increase nighttime power to 1,000 watts. However, KZNE took over WTAW's longtime role as the flagship of Texas A&M Aggies athletics; indeed, WTAW's call letters stand for "Watch The Aggies Win."
On December 4, 2003, WTAW and KZNE were sold to Bryan Broadcasting.[9]
5YA and 5XB
WTAW has its roots in experimental broadcasts in the late 1910s and early 1920s. At the Texas Agricultural College, licensed radio amateurs using telegraphic code operated on amateur radio frequencies. The names of participants with licensed station call signs and hometowns were as follows:
- Harry M. Saunders, 5NI - Greenville, Texas
- George E. Endress, 5JA/5ZAG - Austin, Texas
- W. Eugene Gray, 5QY - Austin, Texas
- J. Gordon Gray, 5QY - Austin, Texas
- Charles C. Clark, 5QA - Austin, Texas
- Franklin K. Matejka, 5RS - Caldwell, Texas
Shortly after the hostilities of World War I ended, amateur radio activities resumed. Students who had radio operating licenses were permitted to operate school stations. W. A. Tolson, Chief Operator at Texas A&M Experimental Station 5XB, and operators at University of Texas Experimental Station 5XU, decided to transmit the play-by-play of a Texas A&M Aggies football Thanksgiving football game from College Station.
At the time of the broadcast, the state of radio communications had not yet reached the point where vacuum tubes would be used in universal voice transmission. Instead, intelligence was commonly conveyed by dots and dashes using the International Morse radiotelegraph code. Transmissions by code are inherently much slower than by voice and its normal rate of speed is in the vicinity of 20 words or 100 characters per minute. This is too slow to keep up with gridiron activities and therefore, a system of abbreviations had to be devised. It so happened that Harry Saunders had previously worked as an operator with Western Union and was familiar with methods used by commercial telegraph companies in furnishing the play-by-play accounts of football and baseball games to newspapers, private sporting clubs, etc. When it was mentioned on the air to the operators at the University of Texas that such a list of abbreviations was being prepared, numerous requests for a copy of the list were received by radio and by mail from some of the 275 then licensed amateur radio operators in the state. Thus, what had started out to be a point-to-point broadcast, turned out to be one with many listeners.
For transmission, wires were run from the press box at Kyle Field to the station in the Electrical Engineering building a half-mile or so away. For reception, other wires were run to the home of a radio amateur who lived near the playing field. This arrangement enabled the operator to hear his own transmissions as well as those from amateur stations should their operators wish to interrupt for clarification or other information. The only radio equipment at the press box was a key for transmitting and a pair of headphones from receiving.
Although the reporting of play-by-play action in 1921 was simpler than that of today due to the absence of the two-platoon system and the lesser frequency of substitutions, it still required the help of spotters from each team to make it possible. The activity on the gridiron had to be put into abbreviations and then into radio signals. Actually, there was little delay in conveying the information to others and it is estimated that this delay rarely amounted to more than one play behind. Only one incident threatened the success of this broadcast. Near the end of the first half of the game a fuse blew out on the equipment, but this was hurriedly replaced by Tolson who went to the Electrical Engineering building after having been excused temporarily from his duty in the Aggie band. It is doubtful that Saunders, the sole operator in the press box, ever envisioned the magnitude of the chore that he had agreed to accept.
The situation at the University of Texas was relatively simple; and with the exception of more persons in the room and the addition of an audio amplifier and horn speaker, it could well have been the location of another radio amateur listener. The Gray brothers (now deceased), Clark and Endress manned the transmitter and receiver positions, copying the abbreviations sent from Kyle Field and on occasion, communicating with Saunders. Slips of paper with received abbreviations were passed over a long table to Matejka, who relayed the decoding over a horn speaker through an open window to the many interested University students who had gathered outside to keep up with the progress of the game.
Equipment at 5XB - Texas A&M
The equipment was constructed for the most part in the Electrical Engineering laboratory by the radio amateur students interested in the station and with the help and guidance of the head of the Electrical Engineering Department, Dean F. C. Bolton who later became President of the College. The main power transformer had been constructed for oil testing purposes and was capable of providing the power limit of two kilowatts allowable under the special experimental license of 5XB.
The transmitting condenser consisted of about 100 clear glass photographic plates interlaced with tinfoil from damaged paper condensers from the laboratory. The entire "sandwich" of glass plates and tinfoil was immersed in an oil-filled copper-lined box. Its performance was unusually good considering the voltage involved.
The oscillation transformer was "loaned" by the Signal Corps Radio Laboratory which had been established on the campus during World War I for training of military personnel. It was a real beauty consisting of heavy aluminum wire wound on separators made from genuine mahogany.
A number of rotary spark gaps were tried from time to time and the one used on the date of the broadcast was a modified commercial unit bought by Saunders on New York City's Radio Row district in the summer of 1921 while he was attending an R.O.T.C. summer training camp at Red Bank, New Jersey. The modification consisted of mounting the motor behind the control panel with its rotating shaft extended through the panel. The electrodes, both fixed and rotary, were then re-mounted on the front of the panel. A circular wooden cover with a glass front enclosed the gap forming an almost airtight unit. After a few characters were transmitted, the...oxygen would be exhausted and the note of the signal neared that of a quenched gap. Near the end of each transmission, the operator would remove the power from the motor and its flywheel effect as the speed decreased provided a unique and distinctive signature.
The antenna was suspended from a steel tower on the Electrical Engineering Building in which the station was located on the third floor to another tower atop the dormitory next door. The main station receiver was an early model Coast Guard tuner consisting of multi-tapped coils with both coarse and fine tuning taps supplemented by a variable air condenser. This tuning unit was connected to a World War I Signal Corps VT-1 vacuum tube detector unit and a two-tube audio amplifier. Filament voltage was obtained from Signal Corps alkaline storage batteries and the high voltage was provided by conventional "B" batteries. By today's standards such a receiver would be useless with crowded signals, but at that time it worked out fairly well.
The Infomaniacs
WTAW is the home of the longest running radio show in the Brazos Valley, the Infomaniacs. The morning show was first known as the Muck and Mire show, dating to at least the 1960s. Current host, Scott DeLucia, a well-known local personality who doesn't ride the bus, started his association with WTAW and the Muck and Mire show in the late 1960s after doing "color" for local A&M Consolidated sports. He is the longest serving media personality in the city and surrounding area, having not only been involved with WTAW, but also serving as the News Director for KBTX, the CBS affiliate in Bryan/College Station, as well as being an on-the-air sports anchor, in addition to also contributing to the Bryan/College Station Eagle, the daily newspaper which serves the twin cities and Brazos County.
References
- ^ "WTAW Facility Record". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division. Retrieved 2009-09-10.
- ^ WTAW.com/contact-us
- ^ Radio-Locator.com/WTAW
- ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1950 page 288
- ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1935 page 58
- ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1960 page A-232
- ^ Broadcasting Yearbook 1990 page B-298
- ^ "WTAW Call Sign History". United States Federal Communications Commission, audio division. Retrieved 2009-09-10.
- ^ "FCC Application". Federal Communications Commission.
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External links
- Official website
- Facility details for Facility ID WTAW ({{{2}}}) in the FCC Licensing and Management System
- {{{2}}} in Nielsen Audio's AM station database
- Basic Information about Amateur Radio from ARRL.