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Low power FM (LPFM) radio stations in the U.S. state of Texas. Pages in category "Low-power FM radio stations in Texas" The following 51 pages are in this category, out of 51 total.
KCYB-LP (103.5 FM) is a terrestrial American low power radio station, licensed to the unincorporated area of Cypress, Harris County, Texas, United States, and is owned by the Cypress Broadcasting Club of Cypress, Texas. [2]
Low-power FM radio stations (LPFM) started broadcasting in the year 2000 after the FCC began licensing of 100 watt and 10 watt local community radio stations across the United States and its territories.
Part-15 Low Power AM Radio in U.S. Part 15 Radio Stations of North America (from archive.org April 2006) Radio Deregulation: Has It Served Citizens and Musicians? REC Networks LPFM site; Society of LPFM Broadcasters Inc. (based in Auckland, New Zealand) The Telecommunications Act of 1996 and its Impact by Nicholas Economides (September 1998)
HD-2 was formerly home to the student-run Rice University radio station KTRU, but fell silent after KTRU signed a deal in September 2015 to broadcast on the 96.1 frequency via a new low-power FM station located in southwest Houston. [27] The then-blank HD-2 channel was soon replaced with the programming of the HD-3 channel, which was shut down.
KBRZ (1460 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Missouri City, Texas.It is operated by Sangeet Radio and owned by Daij Media, LLC. [2] The station airs a South Asian radio format targeted at the Greater Houston radio market, with listeners originally from India, Pakistan and Bangladesh now living in Southeast Texas.
This is a list of FM radio stations in the United States having call signs beginning with the letters KN through KP. Low-power FM radio stations, those with designations such as KNAK-LP , have not been included in this list.
[30] (A waiver, delaying the required change until January 10, 2022, was issued for 15 Alaska translators, but a low-power Alaska station broadcasting on channel 6, KNIK-LP in Anchorage, was not included in this waiver.) [31] The prohibition of LPTV analog transmissions resulted in the elimination of an estimated 28 de facto radio operations ...