City | Toledo, Ohio |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Toledo, Ohio metropolitan area |
Branding | Talk Radio 100.7 |
Frequency | 100.7 MHz |
Repeater(s) | 105.5-2 WQQO-HD-2 |
First air date | January 1997 |
Format | Talk |
Language(s) | English |
ERP | 82 watts |
HAAT | 108.1 meters |
Class | D (FM translator) |
Facility ID | 81369 |
Transmitter coordinates | 41°38′49″N 83°36′18″W / 41.64694°N 83.60500°WCoordinates: 41°38′49″N 83°36′18″W / 41.64694°N 83.60500°W (NAD83) |
Callsign meaning | sequentially assigned |
Former callsigns |
W265CB (May–August 2010) W264AK (1996–2010) |
Former frequencies | 100.7 (1996–2010) 100.9 (April–July 2010) |
Owner |
Cumulus Media (Cumulus Licensing LLC) |
Sister stations | WKKO, WLQR, WTOD, WRQN, WMIM, WQQO, WXKR |
Website | Talk Radio 100.7 Website |
W264AK is an FM translator licensed for Toledo, Ohio. It operates on 100.7 MHz at 82 watts as a translator for 105.5 WQQO, but carries an analog rebroadcast of the HD2 channel from WQQO's HD Radio subcarrier, in effect making the HD2 channel a terrestrial station in its own right. W264AK is branded with the translator's frequency as "Talk Radio 100.7" and carries a Talk format. The originating source for W264AK was formerly the HD2 channel of classic rocker 94.5 WXKR, which continues to broadcast in HD but without any side channels.
W264AK received its first license on 22 January 1997; the owner was Calvary Chapel of Twin Falls, licensee of KAWZ in Twin Falls, Idaho.
On 10 December 2009, Calvary Chapel of Twin Falls applied the Federal Communications Commission to transfer the license for the translator to Cumulus Media, owner of Toledo's WXKR. The transfer was completed on 23 April 2010.
"The Zone", originally W265CB (at 100.9) and WXKR-HD2, debuted in November 2001 on 106.5 WRWK at Delta, Ohio in the Toledo market, and lasted on analog until 22 June 2009, when WRWK became WLQR-FM as "The Ticket", a simulcast of WLQR. The Zone remained on the Internet, and was added to the second HD Radio channel on 94.5 WXKR Toledo. When Cumulus acquired W265CB on 23 April 2010, the translator's frequency was shifted to 100.9 MHz, and was used to relay the HD2 signal from WXKR, giving The Zone an analog transmitter again. The translator's frequency moved back to 100.7 MHz on July 29, 2010, citing complaints from people unable to listen to Detroit rock station WRIF, located on adjacent channel 101.1 MHz.