WIN Television | |
---|---|
Launched | 18 March 1962 |
Owned by | WIN Corporation |
Picture format |
576i (SDTV) 16:9 1080i (HDTV) 16:9 |
Slogan | Entertaining Australia |
Country | Australia |
Language | English |
Broadcast area | Regional QLD, Southern NSW & ACT, Regional VIC, Mildura, Tasmania, Eastern SA, Regional WA, Griffith and the Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area (M.I.A) |
Affiliates |
Network Ten Nine Network (Griffith and Eastern SA) Seven Network (Griffith and Eastern SA) |
Headquarters |
Wollongong, New South Wales (head office) Ingleburn, Sydney (national play-out centre) |
Formerly called | WIN-4 (1962-1980) |
Sister channel(s) |
WIN HD Gold |
Website | wintv.com.au |
Availability
|
|
Terrestrial | |
Freeview WIN owned (virtual) | 8/88 |
Freeview WIN HD (virtual) | 80 |
Optus D1 | Transponder 3 |
Intelsat 2 | Transponder 2 |
HiTRON (Papua New Guinea) | 6 |
Cable | |
TransTV Digital | 9 |
NC Digital | 9 |
WIN Television is an Australian television network owned by WIN Corporation that is based in Wollongong, New South Wales. WIN commenced transmissions on 18 March 1962 as a single Wollongong-only station, and has since expanded to 24 owned-and-operated stations with transmissions covering a larger geographical area of Australia than any other television network except for Australia Plus which broadcasts to 44 countries.
The network's name, WIN is a reference to its original Wollongong station WIN-4, itself an acronym of Wollongong Illawarra New South Wales. Through its news division, WIN News, WIN Television broadcasts a half-hour news service to twenty regional markets.
Television Wollongong Transmission Limited (TWT), was incorporated on 4 October 1955 by a group of local businessmen. Five years later, it was awarded a licence by the Postmaster-General's Department broadcast to the Illawarra and South Coast regions, over a number of other groups aligned to Sydney-based stations ATN-7 and TCN-9. The new station was to broadcast on the VHF-4 frequency, using the callsign WIN (which stood for Wollongong (and the) Illawarra Network or alternatively Wollongong Illawarra New South Wales, in line with other Australian callsigns). Soon after, a plot of land was purchased at Fort Drummond, approximately two kilometres south of the Wollongong central business district, for the station's television studios.
Prior to the opening night's transmissions, WIN-4 undertook a television conversion program, aimed at encouraging residents to acquire new tuning equipment and converting television sets in the area to receive the station's allocated frequency. A transmitter was to be erected on Knight's Hill, however test transmissions were delayed due to rain.