Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Map of regional and local stations in Ireland. This list of radio stations in the Republic of Ireland lists all licensed radio stations broadcast in Ireland, sorted first by legal status, then by area. [1] The abbreviations MW, FM, DAB and DTT indicate the broadcasting bands used by each station. [2]
The following is a list of NTC-licensed radio stations in the Cordillera Administrative Region of the Philippines. [1] [2] current as of 2024. The tables can be sorted by call sign, branding, frequency, location, owner, languages and radio format. Also included below are defunct radio stations and Internet-only stations.
Map of European Public and State-run Radio Broadcasters. This article contains publicly-funded radio channels. [1]Some are run by public service broadcasters who have editorial independence from the government, though most are run by state media which does not have editorial independence.
Pages in category "Radio stations in the Republic of Ireland" The following 47 pages are in this category, out of 47 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
All of RTÉ's digital radio services, and the private radio service Radio Maria Ireland, are available on Saorview. Generic DVB receivers generally need mains power, but are typically cheaper than DAB radios. Many portable DAB radio sets have 1 ⁄ 10 th to 1 ⁄ 50 th of the running time of an AM/FM set, typically giving only 6 hours use ...
CUH FM Hospital Radio - (102.0FM) - Cork University Hospital, Cork, County Cork. Mater Hospital Radio - Mater Hospital, Dublin, County Dublin. Dreamtime 92.6FM - S.O.S. Kilkenny Ltd, Callan Road, Kilkenny, Co. Kilkenny. [6] South Tipperary General Hospital Radio 93.7FM - South Tipperary General and Maternity Hospital, Clonmel, County Tipperary.
Owned by the Presidential Broadcast Service under the Presidential Communications Group, the station is operated from Mondays to Sundays 1:30 AM to 11:30 AM PHT (17:30-03:30 UTC) on various shortwave frequencies, with internet live streaming across all schedules.
During Martial Law, the Bureau of Broadcasts took over the station and became DPI Radio 1 / MPI Radio 1. In November 1978, due to the switch of the Philippine AM dial from the NARBA-mandated 10 kHz spacing to the 9 kHz rule implemented by the Geneva Frequency Plan of 1975 , the station's frequency was transferred from 710 kHz to 918 kHz.