XEWA-AM
City |
San Luis Potosí, San Luis Potosí Monterrey, Nuevo León |
---|---|
Broadcast area | San Luis Potosí |
Branding | Los 40 |
Slogan | Music Inspires Life |
Frequency |
540 (kHz) 103.9 (MHz) |
First air date |
1950 May 4, 1961 (Monterrey concession) |
Format | Spanish & English Top 40 (CHR) |
Power |
150,000 watts (AM, SLP)[1] 1,500 watts day/1,000 watts night (AM, Monterrey) |
ERP | 25,000 watts (FM)[2] |
Class | A (AM) |
Transmitter coordinates | 22°09′28.6″N 100°55′34.5″W / 22.157944°N 100.926250°W (SLP) |
Owner |
Televisa Radio (managed by Radiorama/Grupo AS in San Luis Potosí) (Cadena Radiodifusora Mexicana, S.A. de C.V.) |
Website |
www |
XEWA-AM/XHEWA-FM is a Class A Mexican radio station that serves the San Luis Potosí area, with its transmitter in Soledad de Graciano Sánchez. XEWA broadcasts on 540 kHz, a Canadian and Mexican clear-channel frequency.
History
XEWA received its concession on December 2, 1948, one of a string of repeaters of XEW-AM 900 Mexico City authorized in the late 1940s. XEWA began operations on the frequency of 540 kHz with 150,000 watts of power — still its current levels, making it the most powerful AM radio station in the country.
In May 1961, a second XEWA-AM was licensed to operate in Monterrey, Nuevo León, in order to provide daytime XEW service and an improved nighttime signal there. It operates with 1,500 watts during the day and 1,000 watts night.
On March 16, 1988, XEWA struck out on its own with a grupera format known as Súper Estelar WA. Broadcasting from Monterrey, Súper Estelar was programmed by Multimedios Estrellas de Oro and served as one of Mexico's pioneering grupera stations. After five years, Súper Estelar left XEWA and migrated to XHSNP-FM in San Luis Potosí, which was owned directly by Multimedios; it was also carried on some Multimedios radio stations in other cities until the format became known as La Caliente.
The end of Súper Estelar made way for a flip to the Ke Buena format from Radiópolis (now Televisa Radio), which lasted into the late 1990s when the station began repeating XEW again, now known as "Cadena W Azul y Plata" and later as "W Radio". In 2003, Radiorama began managing the station for Televisa Radio.
2009 saw the first ever split between XEWA Monterrey and XEWA San Luis Potosí. The San Luis Potosí station was transferred to local radio company MG Radio, while XEWA Monterrey began offering a Nuevo León-specific version of W Radio. In May 2012, the Monterrey station began carrying the news and talk programming of XHMSN-FM 96.5 "Dominio Radio", which lasted for several months until returning to W Radio.
Meanwhile, changes were afoot in San Luis Potosí. XHEWA-FM 103.9 was authorized in 2011 and came on the air that July; while it is technically an AM-FM migrant, the AM station cannot be shut off until radio service is available in the entirety of its coverage area, including ten municipalities in five states with no other radio service.[3] In 2012, Radiorama returned to manage XEWA/XHEWA, and in July, W Radio was replaced with Los 40 Principales. Radiorama's regional affiliate in Tampico, Grupo AS, took over the San Luis Potosí region in 2016.
The Monterrey station followed suit, flipping to Los 40 in November 2014. XEWA Monterrey, however, is operated separately from the San Luis Potosí station and directly by Televisa Radio.
Coverage
XEWA-AM is a 150 kW clear-channel station, which covers the Mexican states of San Luis Potosí, Nuevo León, Tamaulipas, Coahuila, Zacatecas, Querétaro, Guanajuato and Aguascalientes. The station also has nighttime coverage throughout most of Mexico, as well as the neighboring American states of Texas and New Mexico.
References
- ↑ Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio AM. Last modified 2016-03-31. Retrieved 2015-07-08.
- ↑ Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio FM. Last modified 2016-03-31. Retrieved 2015-07-08.
- ↑ List I of stations that must remain on AM - IFT Pleno 2014