City | Edmonton, Alberta |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Edmonton Capital Region |
Branding | 630 CHED |
Slogan | Edmonton's breaking news and conversation station |
Frequency | 630 kHz (AM) |
First air date | March 3, 1954 |
Format | News/Talk/Sports |
Language(s) | English |
Audience share | 10.0 (February 25, 2013 | -May 26, 2013 , )
Power | 50,000 watts |
Class | B (regional) |
Facility ID | 106117 |
Transmitter coordinates | 53°23′55″N 113°23′55″W / 53.39861°N 113.39861°WCoordinates: 53°29′26″N 113°26′55″W / 53.49056°N 113.44861°W |
Callsign meaning | C H EDmonton |
Former frequencies | 1080 kHz (1954-1963) |
Affiliations | CBS Radio News |
Owner |
Corus Entertainment (Corus Premium Television Ltd.) |
Sister stations |
Radio: CHQT, CISN-FM, CKNG-FM TV: CITV-DT |
Website | 630ched.com |
CHED (630 AM) is a radio station broadcasting News/Talk/Sports format. Licensed to Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, it first began broadcasting in 1954. The station is currently owned by Corus Entertainment. CHED's studios are located on 84th Street in Edmonton, while its transmitters are located in Southeast Edmonton.
The station first signed on to 1080 kHz at 8:00 p.m. on March 3, 1954 , from studios on the corner of 107 Street and 100 Avenue in Downtown Edmonton. On May 14, 1963 , at 6:30 a.m., CHED switched to its current frequency of 630 kHz.
Although primarily concerned with talk and news programming, CHED is also the voice of the NHL Edmonton Oilers and CFL Edmonton Eskimos. In the late evenings it re-broadcasts older radio dramas.
For a significant portion of its history, CHED was Edmonton's (and North America's) most successful Top 40 station having a staggering 40% share of the local listening audience, but with the arrival of FM radio, it lost its listenership and moved to an all-talk format. Other news personalities on the network include Bob Layton, Bryan Hall and formerly Ed Mason.
CHED is currently the most listened to radio station in Edmonton according to the Fall 2011 PPM data report released by BBM Canada.