*** Welcome to piglix ***

WIN Television

WIN Television
WIN Television 2016 logo.png
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.


...
Wikipedia

...