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HD2IOA is the callsign of a time signal radio station operated by the Navy of Ecuador. [1] The station is located at Guayaquil, Ecuador and transmits in the HF band on 3.81 and 7.6 MHz.
The network has its origins in 1997 in Guayaquil with Costavisión and 1998 in Quito with Andivisión. Andivisión also operated one of González' radio stations in Ecuador, Tropicálida Stereo. [2] In 2002, the channel's operating company was acquired by Chan Chang, one of González's aides. [3] The stations were renamed Kanal 38 in 2004.
The channel began its operations under the name of CRE Televisión (the initials of Compañía Radiodifusora del Ecuador) through cable television companies in Guayaquil, and broadcasting on Channel 12 in the VHF band. The station was owned by CRE Radio, a radio station that had launched in 1940.
A Siemens single side-band transmitter at Radio Station HCJB's international transmitter site in Pifo, Ecuador. 1990 - The first HC-100 (100,000-watt) transmitter goes on the air in Quito, Ecuador. Since that time eight more HC-100s were built and put into use by the World Radio Missionary Fellowship, Inc. in Ecuador, Swaziland and Australia.
TC Televisión is a state-run television channel in Ecuador.The network was founded in 1969 and was commercially-funded for many years until 2011 when Grupo Iasaías went into a lawsuit and was sold to a state government unit, Since then the channel has been owned by SERTVSA (Sistema Ecuatoriano de Radio y Televisión) despite a local court ruling that the Isaías brothers return all of their ...
Cabezas worked as a radio presenter for a variety of radio stations of Esmeraldas, Quito and Guayaquil including Radio Disney of Guayaquil. [2] In 2007 she was seen on TV as the presenter of RTS's morning TV program. This ceased in 2009 when she was the first Afro-Ecuadorian news anchor for Ecuador TV.
However, the official permit for HCJB-TV would only arrive on May 18, 1961, [5] being the second authorization at the national level, after channel 4 in Guayaquil, with that, the channel continued its regular broadcasts, moving from channel 2 to channel 4 to avoid interference with the radio signals of the Ecuadorian police and army. [2] [6]
Guayaquil (Spanish pronunciation: [ɡwaʝaˈkil] ⓘ; Quechua: Wayakil), officially Santiago de Guayaquil, is the largest city in Ecuador and also the nation's economic capital and main port. The city is the capital of Guayas Province and the seat of Guayaquil Canton .