WNYN-LD

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WNYN-LD
New York, New York
United States
CityNew York, New York
ChannelsDigital: 30 (UHF, shared with )
Virtual: 39
BrandingTVC 39
Programming
Affiliations39.1: BeIN Sports Xtra (2019−present)
Ownership
OwnerTVC Television
(TVC NY LICENSE LLC)
History
First air date
July 19, 1991; 30 years ago (1991-07-19)
Former call signs
W51BV (1991-1995)
WNYN-LP (1995-2009)
Former channel number(s)
Analog:
51 (UHF, 1991–2002)
39 (UHF, 2002–2009)
The Box (1991−2000)
Dark (2000−2001, 2001−2002)
LTV (2001)
Azteca America (2002−2010, 2016−2019)
Independent (2010−2012)
(2012−2016)
Call sign meaning
New York, New York
Technical information
Facility ID74305
ClassLD
ERP3 kW
HAAT200 m (656 ft)
Transmitter coordinates40°44′50″N 73°56′38″W / 40.74722°N 73.94389°W / 40.74722; -73.94389

WNYN-LD, virtual channel 39 (UHF digital channel 30), is a low-powered BeIN Sports Xtra-affiliated television station licensed to New York City, New York, United States. The station is owned by TVC Television, with its transmitter located atop the Citibank Building in Long Island City, Queens.

History[]

As W51BV[]

The station started out as W51BV channel 51 on July 19, 1991 as an affiliate of The Box Music Network licensed to Deer Park.

As WNYN-LP[]

On November 20, 1995, the station became WNYN-LP. In 2000, they ceased operations on channel 51 without warning, leaving many fans of The Box in the area in the dark. During this time, WNYN prepared to move to channel 39, while its sister station WXNY-LP, who at the time was on channel 39, prepared to move to channel 32.

One Sunday night in 2001, channel 51 came back on the air for one night with the LTV programming that also aired on WXNY-LP, but there was no audio. It is believed that this was WNYN's way of preventing their license from being revoked by the FCC for being silent for more than 12 consecutive months.

In 2002, WNYN-LP moved to channel 39 and became an affiliate of Azteca América, after the network earlier failed to acquire WSAH, which they intended to use as New York's Azteca América flagship.

As WNYN-LD[]

On June 12, 2009, analog transmission for full-powered stations ceased and digital transmission began. Azteca America moved to WMBC-TV (channel 63)'s sixth subchannel in 2010. WNYN concurrently switched to an independent station with a station logo which shows an overnight view of the New York City skyline with a new station branding called TVC 39. WNYN airs movies along with music videos plus general programming. WNYN is currently airing infomercials and is one of three affiliates that might join MundoFox in 2012, but it was picked up by WPXO-LD which has since ceased CaribeVision in 2012. Later that year they have found another affiliate which is , thus replacing independent programming, which since the transition has been seen on 39.2 and 39.5 in both English and Spanish programming. As a result of the switch www.furiamusicaltv.com has since discontinued streaming programming. The website has since returned in 2013, airing infomercials in Spanish plus local programming.

Digital television[]

The station's digital signal is multiplexed:

Channel Video Aspect Short name Programming[1]
39.1 720p 16:9 WNYN Main WNYN-LD programming / BeIN Sports Xtra

The station moved to channel 30, shared with , as the result of a channel sharing agreement implemented to resolve a displacement conflict in August 2019.

References[]

  1. ^ "WNYN-LD NEW YORK, NY". RabbitEars.

External links[]

  • WNYN in the FCC TV station database
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