Wlw

WLW is a radio station located in Cincinnati, Ohio, run by Clear Channel Communications and is located at 700 AM. The station runs under the talk format and is the flagship station for The Truckin' Bozo, a popular nationwide, overnight program especially for truckers. Its studios are in the Kenwood section of Sycamore Township and its transmitter is located in Mason.
    
WLW currently broadcasts using 50,000 watts of power, but that wasn't always the case. For about six years WLW experimented with broadcasting at 500,000 watts, the first station in the world to do so, during the overnight hours under callsign W8XO. It stopped in 1939 because of complaints from around the United States and Canada that WLW was overpowering other stations as far away as Toronto. WLW powered up again a few times during WWII in order to send special broadcasts to American troops in Europe, and has not broadcasted at 500,000 since then. The station was started by radio manufacturer Powell Crosley and operated by the Crosley Broadcasting Corporation until the 1960s. The station's first 50-kW transmitter, made by Western Electric, is still functional and sees very occasional service.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
harold ross
melmoth the wanderer
ruffini's rule
gunsmith
john ross (industrialist)
bulacan, bulacan
saddleback church
adam stefan sapieha
philosophical theism
john scott
robert william seton watson
gemcutter
john french sloan
villamor airbase
hiram bithorn stadium
ashton stevens
ernest m. stires
jo van fleet
dramatic structure
jan valtin
egbert van alstyne
braemar
sergey vavilov
walter krivitsky
serge voronoff
albert h. woods
william henry wright
william h. wright
miyoshi umeki
magnesium peroxide
wright patman
keiko yukimura
associated students of michigan state university
solo family
street newspaper
achievement medal
anime game
dyce
river quoich
earl c. slipher
dugba
the courtship of eddie's father
student assembly
janet cooke