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Bangor, Maine United States |
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Branding | Fox 22 (general) Fox 22 News (newscasts) ABC 7 (on DT2) |
Slogan | Your Primetime Local News Leader |
Channels | Digital: 22 (UHF) |
Subchannels | (see article) |
Translators | WVII-TV 7.2 Bangor |
Affiliations | Fox & MyNetworkTV |
Owner |
Rockfleet Broadcasting (Rockfleet Broadcasting III, LLC) |
First air date | April 13, 2003 |
Call letters' meaning | refers to Fox |
Sister station(s) | WVII-TV |
Former callsigns | W22BU (1995–2003) WFVX-LP (2003–2013) |
Former channel number(s) | 22 (UHF analog, 2003–2012) |
Transmitter power | 2 kW 27.5 kW (beam tilt) |
Class | LP |
Facility ID | 15287 |
Transmitter coordinates | 44°45′45.00″N 68°33′58.00″W / 44.7625000°N 68.5661111°W |
Website | www |
WFVX-LD is the Fox affiliate for Central and Eastern Maine, licensed to serve Bangor. It broadcasts a low-power digital signal on UHF channel 22 from a transmitter on Black Cap Mountain along the Penobscot and Hancock County line. The station can also be seen on Charter Spectrum channel 4 and in high definition on digital channel 704.
Owned by Rockfleet Broadcasting, WFVX is a sister station to ABC affiliate WVII-TV, and operates from WVII's studios in West Bangor. The station is also seen on the second digital subchannel of WVII. In addition to Fox programming, WFVX is a secondary affiliate of MyNetworkTV, and airs Jewelry Television overnight. As a low-power station, WFVX's main signal has very little penetration outside the greater Bangor area. However, it is carried on cable and satellite television as far away as Skowhegan and Bar Harbor; additionally, its carriage on the WVII subchannel gives the station full-market over-the-air coverage.
A construction permit for a low-power station on channel 22 in Bangor was granted on January 12, 1995, and was assigned the call letters W22BU. Following the death of original owner Dale Buschow in 1998, the station was acquired by MS Communications on January 3, 2001; its license to cover was issued on March 1. MS Communications had plans to establish wireless cable networks, but never broadcast anything other than test patterns on its stations. MS sold W22BU to Rockfleet Broadcasting, owner of WVII-TV, in 2003. Rockfleet put the station on the air as a Fox affiliate on April 13, 2003; the following day, the call letters were changed to WFVX-LP. The WFVX call letters were transferred from what is now WFUP, the Vanderbilt, Michigan satellite of then-sister station and fellow Fox affiliate WFQX-TV in Cadillac, Michigan.