City | Plattsburgh, New York |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Champlain Valley |
Branding | The Zone 960 AM |
Slogan | The Champlain Valley's Home For Sports |
Frequency | 960 kHz |
First air date | February 3, 1935 (as WMFF) |
Format | Sports |
Power | 5,000 watts |
Class | B |
Facility ID | 52806 |
Transmitter coordinates | 44°34′27.0″N 73°26′54.0″W / 44.574167°N 73.448333°W |
Former callsigns | WMFF (1935–1948) |
Former frequencies | 1310 kHz (1935–1941) 1340 kHz (1941–1948) |
Affiliations |
CBS Sports Radio NBC Sports Radio |
Owner | Vox AM/FM, LLC |
Sister stations | WEZF, WCPV, WXZO, WVTK |
Webcast | Listen Live |
Website | 960thezone.com |
WEAV is an English-language American radio station in Plattsburgh, New York, with studios in Colchester, Vermont. The station broadcasts a sports format.
Owned and operated by Vox AM/FM, the station broadcasts on 960 kHz with a power of 5,000 watts as a class B station, using a directional antenna with slightly different daytime and nighttime directional patterns in order to protect various other stations on that frequency. Both daytime and the tighter nighttime patterns of WEAV are directed mostly to the north and west of Plattsburgh, with not a lot of signal strength reaching deep into Vermont.
The station signed on February 3, 1935 as WMFF, owned by Plattsburgh Broadcasting Corporation (in turn controlled by the Bissell family), and operating on 1310 kHz. The North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement in 1941 moved the station to 1340 kHz. On October 23, 1948, the station changed its call letters to WEAV; two months later, on December 29, the station relocated again, this time to the current 960 kHz. At one time an affiliate of ABC Radio and its predecessor, the Blue Network, WEAV switched to CBS Radio in the late 1950s. The station inaugurated FM service on February 3, 1960, with the launch of WEAV-FM (99.9 FM) as a simulcast of the AM station.
By 1972, WEAV had a contemporary format, with only some of its programming simulcast on the FM (which had largely switched to another format). Within a year, the station was mixing in some country and rock music, and by 1974 WEAV-FM had ended the remaining simulcast periods and become WGFB. Soon afterward, WEAV became a top 40 station.