WHNE-LD

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
WHNE-LD
WHNE 2014.jpg
Detroit, Michigan
United States
CityDetroit, Michigan
ChannelsDigital: 3 (VHF)
Virtual: 3 (PSIP)
Programming
Subchannels3.1: TheGrio TV
3.2: GetTV
3.3: Corner Store TV
3.4: HSN2
3.5: SonLife
3.6: Classic Movies
3.7: Retro TV
3.8: Jewelry TV
3.9: NewsNet
3.10: Rev'n
3.11: Ace TV
3.12: Heartland
Ownership
OwnerTait Broadcasting, LLC
History
First air date
2005; 17 years ago (2005)
Former call signs
W52CU (CP, 1996–2004)
WHNE-LP (2005-2010)
Former channel number(s)
Analog:
52 (UHF (CP), 1996–2004)
32 (UHF, 2005–2010)
Virtual:
26 (PSIP, 2010–2014)
14 (PSIP, 2014–2020)
Digital:
26 (UHF, 2010–2015)
20 (UHF, 2015–2020)
Analog/DT1:
UATV (2005–06)
America One (2006-14)
Soul of the South (2014-15)[1]
Test pattern (2015-16)[2]
LATV (2016-17)
Shop LC
(night only, 2016-17)
Infomercials
(May–August 2017)
Light TV (2017-21)
DT2:
Retro TV (2010-18)
DT4:
Jewelry TV (2010-14)
Tuff TV[1] - Gun TV
(2014-16)
Diya TV (2016-18)
DT5:
Corner Store TV - Jewelry TV (2014-15)[1]
DT6:
Vibrant TV (2016)
DT7:
Tuff TV (2016-18)
DT11:
Fun Roads (2020-21)
Call sign meaning
Tribute to WCSX’s pre-1976 call letters, WHNE-FM
Technical information
Licensing authority
FCC
ClassLD
ERP3 kW
HAAT483 ft
Links
Public license information
Profile
LMS
Websitehttp://www.whnetv.com

WHNE-LD, virtual and VHF digital channel 3, is a low-powered television station licensed to Detroit, Michigan, United States. The station is owned by Tait Broadcasting. The station's transmitter and studio offices are located in Oak Park, Michigan.

History[]

Early history[]

The station was originally owned by P&P Cable Holdings as W52CU and was licensed to Pinconning. P&P sold many of its stations and construction permits to NTN Saginaw, W52CU was one of these. W52CU never signed on in Pinconning.

In late 2005, Tait Broadcasting acquired W52CU and relocated the station to Flint, where it signed on as WHNE-LP on channel 32.

The WHNE calls were originally used on radio in the Detroit area; first from 1973 to 1978 on what is now WCSX (94.7 FM); Honey Radio (1950s/60s Oldies) is born- simulcast on both 94.7 FM (WHNE) and 560 AM (WHND). WHNE/WHND is one of the first Oldies stations in the USA. 1976: Sister station WHNE 94.7 changes format to Adult Contemporary as WMJC 'Majic 95'. WHND continues with Oldies format as Honey Radio. It is known that former owner P&P generally "resurrects" calls of Michigan radio and TV stations for their low-powered stations.

Until May 2006, WHNE was affiliated with Urban America Television; WHNE switched to America One after UATV suspended operations.

Tower relocation to Holly, digital operations[]

In 2010, the station relocated to a digital signal on channel 26, as WHNE-LD, now located at its new tower location. The directional antenna was designed to protect low-power WLPC-LP operating on channel 26 in Detroit. WLPC-LP had a construction permit to move to digital channel 40. After receiving the construction permit for its new tower site on channel 26, the station applied for additional power, which was granted after approval from the FCC and its Canadian counterpart, the CRTC.

On December 28, 2011, the station returned to the air, broadcasting from a transmitter tower near Holly at the East Holly Road and Interstate 75 (Exit 98) interchange, on UHF 26, and with a PSIP of 26.1 along with four sub channels. The transmitter had a directional antenna pattern mainly to the northwest towards Flint and the southeast towards Pontiac, with its reception area covering both cities.

Move to Detroit[]

Coincidentally, shortly after the station was nearly ready to transmit with increased power, the CRTC switched CHWI-DT-60 in Windsor, Ontario to channel 26.[3] This left WHNE no other choice but to apply for a different channel to avoid any co-channel interference with CHWI.

The only channel found to use was UHF 20, which was previously occupied by the analog signal of WMYD in Detroit, which switched to digital on UHF channel 21. So WHNE filed an application to relocate its transmitter to WMYD's tower in Oak Park and to broadcast on channel 20, focusing on the Metro Detroit area, changing its city of license to Detroit.[4] On March 27, 2012, the station was granted a construction permit to move to UHF channel 20 in Oak Park at 15 kW. In order to avoid a potential PSIP/virtual channel conflict with CHWI-DT-60, the station applied to the FCC to use 14 for its virtual channel, on April 30, 2014.

On September 21, 2014, the station returned to the air for testing at its new Oak Park facility, transmitting signal which covered much of the Metro Detroit area and nearby portions of Windsor and Essex County.

From September 21, 2014 until sometime in 2015, WHNE-LD was an affiliate of Soul of the South Network on 14.1. However, it was removed from the station when the network filed for bankruptcy in 2015 and couldn't pay most of its affiliates.

On November 22, 2015, the station added SonLife to 14.5. Until then, subchannel 14.5 was an affiliate of both Corner Store TV and Jewelry TV.[1] In April 2016, the station launched a website and added LATV to 14.1, becoming Detroit's only over-the-air non-English television station since WUDL-LD dropped the TBN Enlace USA service on that station's 47.5 subchannel along with all other Trinity Broadcasting Network-related networks on other subchannels of that station after Regal Media sold it to King Forward, Inc. in 2015. In May 2017, LATV was replaced with infomercials. Light TV was added to 14.1 on August 24, 2017.

The move to low VHF[]

May 25, 2018 saw WHNE-LD receive its post-repack channel frequency: VHF 3, with an effective radiated power of 3 kW.[5]

Signals on the low VHF band (channels 2 thru 6) travel better than signals on other bands, but require longer antennas (approximately 8 feet long) to receive due to the higher wavelength, and are especially prone to interference from electrical appliances and, especially in the case of metro Detroit, industrial noise. Interference had very little, if any, effect on analog signals, but can obliterate digital signals, which is compounded by WHNE's low power. As a result, the required move was met with negative backlash before it even happened.

WHNE-LD would sign off from its channel 20 location for the final time on March 13, 2020, vacating the frequency for Detroit Public Television. The station was delayed from signing back on at VHF 3 due to its new antenna being delayed during shipping due to the COVID-19 pandemic temporarily closing the ports in Italy, where the antenna parts were purchased from, as detailed in their station's Facebook page. The station managed to find an alternate source for its antenna parts by March 20, however, and planned to resume broadcasting by April 3 or 4, 2020, with a new station branding as TV-3 (with a PSIP of 3.x), but actually ended up returning on April 1.

Digital television[]

Digital channels[]

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect PSIP Short Name Programming[6]
3.1 480i 16:9 TheGrio TheGrio TV
3.2 GetTV GetTV
3.3 THE BOB Corner Store TV
3.4 HSN 2 HSN2
3.5 SBN SonLife
3.6 4:3 DriveIn Classic Movies
3.7 RETRO Retro TV
3.8 16:9 JTV Jewelry TV
3.9 NewsNet NewsNet
3.10 REV'N Rev'n
3.11 ACE TV Ace TV
3.12 Hartlnd Heartland

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d "Detroit Area Antenna TV". Free TV Michigan. 20 September 2018.
  2. ^ "WHNE TV 14". YouTube: Carlos Planas Jr. 23 December 2016. Archived from the original on 2021-12-22.
  3. ^ Government of Canada, Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) (October 27, 2010). "ARCHIVED - CHWI-TV-60 Windsor – Technical change". crtc.gc.ca.
  4. ^ "Google Maps". Google Maps.
  5. ^ "FCCdata.org - powered by REC". fccdata.org.
  6. ^ "RabbitEars.Info". www.rabbitears.info.

External links[]

  • WHNE in the FCC TV station database
Retrieved from ""