Monterrey, Nuevo Leon | |
---|---|
Branding | Azteca 7 |
Slogan | Menos Bla Bla (Less Chit-Chat) |
Channels |
Digital: 43 (UHF) Virtual: 7 () |
Affiliations | Azteca 7 |
Owner |
TV Azteca (Televisión Azteca, S.A. de C.V.) |
Founded | February 1974 |
Former channel number(s) | 8 (analog, 1974-1994?) |
Transmitter power | 90.687 kW |
Transmitter coordinates | 25°37′29.30″N 100°19′13.40″W / 25.6248056°N 100.3203889°W |
Website | TV Azteca Noreste |
XHFN-TDT is a television station in Monterrey, Nuevo Leon, Mexico. The station carries the Azteca 7 network and also serves as the key station of the Azteca Noreste regional network, serving the northeastern states of Mexico with regional news and programming.
XHFN signed on in February 1974 on channel 8, under the auspices of CEMPAE (Centro para el Estudio de Medios y Procedimientos Avanzados de la Educación, or "Center for the Study of Advanced Media and Education Processes"). It primarily broadcast educational programs and telecourses.
In 1983, XHFN became one of several local stations under the auspices of Imevisión, broadcasting programs from its two networks as well as local Monterrey productions, including local news.
In 1993, XHFN was part of the media package that became Televisión Azteca. Also in the 1990s, it moved from channel 8 to channel 7.
XHFN, much like its sister XHWX, maintains a string of repeaters. Some operate on physical channel 17, where XHFN will eventually relocate itself. Among the most important are repeaters in Sabinas Hidalgo (10.02 kW) and a repeater in Guadalupe (9.64 kW) that serves areas shaded from Cerro El Mirador. Lower-power repeaters exist in Cadereyta, China, Escobedo, Galeana, García, Linares and Montemorelos.
Query the FCC's TV station database for XHFN-TDT (brings up all US FCC Query entries for XHFN and its repeaters)