Biography:List of experimental television stations
This page is a list of the experimental television stations before 1946. After 1945 (in the United States ) the television frequencies were opened up to commercialization and regular broadcasts began. Regular broadcast television start dates vary widely by country; in many regions, initial broadcast video deployment was delayed due to mobilisation for World War II.
(Note: The listing of current broadcast channels for these stations is not up-to-date as many low-VHF stations have moved to UHF frequencies as a result of digital television transition. This is less of an issue in the United Kingdom because of its all-UHF system, but most early US broadcasters were on affected channels before analogue shutdown. Very few full-service North American broadcasters remain on physical channels VHF 2-6 digitally due to impulse noise problems and strict limits on maximum transmitted power at these frequencies.)
Television stations, as of 1928
Television stations, as of 1928 United States | |||||||||||||
Television call-sign (original) |
Television call-sign (current) |
City or location | Owner | Transmitter antenna height | Television frequency | Television channel (current) | On air | Off air | Disk holes or lines | Frame rate (frame/s) | Original broadcast system | Current broadcast system | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
WGY | WRGB-TV | Schenectady, New York | General Electric | 380 m | 790 kHz | Channel 6 (VHF) | May 10, 1928 | Present | 48 | Unknown | Mechanical television | ATSC | |
WRNY | None | New York City | Experimenter Publishing | 326 m | 920 kHz | None | August 13, 1928 | 1929 | 48 | 7.5 | Mechanical television | None | |
2XAL | None | New York City | Experimenter Publishing | (with WRNY), 30.91 | 9.7 MHz | None | August 13, 1928 | 1929 | 48 | 7.5 | Mechanical television | None | |
3XK | None | Washington, D.C. | Charles Jenkins Laboratories | 46.7 m | 1.605 MHz | None | July 2, 1928 | 1932 (1934?) | 48 | Unknown | Mechanical television | None | |
WOR | WWOR-TV | Secaucus, New Jersey formerly New York City | Bamberger Broadcasting (from WOR) | 405 m | 740 kHz | Channel 9 (VHF) | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Mechanical television | ATSC | |
KDKA | KDKA-TV | Pittsburgh | Westinghouse Electric Company | 62.5 m | 4.798 MHz | Channel 2 VHF | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Mechanical television | ATSC | |
1XAY | None | Lexington, Massachusetts | WLEX | 51–62 m | 1.9 to 4.7 MHz | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Mechanical television | None | |
4XA | None | Memphis, Tennessee | WSM | 120–125 m | 2.1–2.5 MHz | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Unknown | Mechanical television | None | |
9XAA (short-wave station of WCFL, officially W9XAA) |
None | Chicago | WCFL/Chicago Federation of Labor | 61.25 m[1] | 4.8 MHz | Unknown | June 19, 1928 | 1937[2] | 48[1] | 15[1] | Mechanical television | None | |
Television stations, as of December 1928 United States | |||||||||||||
Television call-sign (original) |
Television call-sign (current) |
City or location | Owner | Transmitter antenna height (m) | Television frequency | Television channel (current) | On air | Off air | Disk holes or lines | frame rate (frame/s) | Original broadcast system | Current broadcast system | |
WGY | WRGB-TV | Schenectady, New York | General Electric | 380 m | 379.5 MHz | Channel 6 (VHF) | 1928 | Still on air | 24 | 21 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | |
2XAF (Upgrade of WGY) | WRGB-TV | Schenectady, New York | General Electric | 380 m | 31.4 MHz | Channel 6 (VHF) | 1928 | Still on air | 24 | 21 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | |
2XAD (upgrade of W2XAF above) | WRGB-TV | Schenectady, New York | General Electric | Channel 6 (VHF) | 21.96 MHz | Channel 6 (VHF) | 1928 | Still on air | 24 | 21 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | |
WRNY | None | New York City | Experimenter Publishing | 326 m | 920 kHz | None | August 13, 1928 | 1929 | 48 | 7.5 | Mechanical television | None | |
2XAL | None | New York City | Experimenter Publishing | (with WRNY), 30.91 | 9.7 MHz | None | August 13, 1928 | 1929 | 48 | 7.5 | Mechanical television | None | |
3XK | None | Washington, D.C. | Charles Jenkins Laboratories | Unknown | 46.72 MHz | None | July 2, 1928 | 1932 (1934?) | 48 | 15 | Mechanical television | None | |
W9XAA WCFL | None | Chicago | Chicago Federation of Labor | 61.25 m[1] | 61.5 MHz | Unknown | June 19, 1928 | 1937[2] | 45[1] | 15[1] | Mechanical television | None | |
WKBI-TV | None | Chicago | Unknown | ? | 215.7 MHz | ? | ? | ? | 48 | 15 | Mechanical television | None | |
WIBO-lost license May 15, 1933 AKA W9XAO[3] |
None | Chicago | Western Television (Sanabria)[3] | ? | 305.9 MHz | ? | Summer 1929[4] | 1933 | 45[4] | 15[4] | Mechanical television | None | |
KGFJ | None | Los Angeles | ? | ? | 212.6 MHz | ? | ? | ? | 48 | -- | Mechanical television | None | |
WLBX | None | Lexington, Massachusetts | ? | ? | 62.5 MHz | ? | ? | ? | 48 | -- | Mechanical television | None |
Television stations, from 1928 to 1939
Television stations, from 1928 to 1939 United States | |||||||||||
Television call-sign (original) |
Television call-sign (current) |
City or location | Owner | Television frequency | Television channel (current) | On air | Off air | Disk holes or lines | frame rate (frame/s) | Original broadcast system | Current broadcast system |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
W9XZV | None | Chicago, IL | Zenith | 2.1-2.2 MHz, later Channel 2 | None | 1939, with a later Zenith experimental station in 1951 | 1953? | ? | ? | Electronic television | None |
W1WX (later became W1XAV) | None | Boston | SW and Television (Hollis Baird) | 2120 kHz | None | April 1929 (became W1XAV in December 1929) | 1931 | 48 (and later, 60 lines) | 15 | Mechanical Television | None |
W1XAV | None | Boston | SW and Television (Hollis Baird) | 2.1-2.2 MHz | None | 1930 | 1931 | 48 | 15 | Mechanical television | None |
W1XAV | None | Boston | Unknown | 2.1-2.2 MHz | SW and Television (Hollis Baird) | 1931 | 1934 | 60 | 20 | Mechanical television | None |
W1XAY | None | Lexington, Massachusetts | Boston Post, WLEX | 2.0-2.1 MHz | None | 1928 | 1930 | 48 | 18 | Mechanical Television | None |
W2XB/WGY/W2XAF/W2XAD | WRGB | Schenectady, NY | General Electric | 2.1-2.2 MHz | VHF 6 | 1928 | ? | 48 | 20 | Mechanical television | ATSC |
W2XCR | None | New York City | Charles Jenkins Laboratories | 2.75-2.85 MHz | None | 1929 | 1931 | 48 | 15 | Mechanical Television | None |
W2XCR | None | New York City | Charles Jenkins Laboratories | 2.75-2.85 MHz | None | 1931 | 1933 | 60 | 20 | Mechanical Television | None |
W2XBS | WNBC-TV | New York City | RCA | 2.0-2.1 MHz | Channel 4 (VHF) | 1928 | 1929 | 60? | 20? | Mechanical television | ATSC |
W2XBS | WNBC-TV | New York City | RCA | 2.75-2.85 MHz | Channel 4 (VHF) | 1928 | 1929 | 60 | 20 | Mechanical television | ATSC |
W2XAB | WCBS-TV | New York City | CBS | 2.1-2.2 MHz | Channel 2 | 1931 | 1933 | 60 | 20 | Mechanical television | ATSC |
WRNY | None | New York City | Unknown | 1010 kHz | None | 1928 | 1929 | 36 | ? | Mechanical Television | None |
WRNY | None | New York City | Unknown | 1010 kHz | None | 1928 | ? | 48 | 10 | Mechanical television | None |
W2XR | None | Long Island City, New York | Hogan's Radio Pictures | 2.85-2.95 MHz | None | March 26, 1929 | 1934 | 60 | 20 | Mechanical television | None |
W3XK | None | Wheaton, Maryland (later moved to Silver Spring, Maryland) | Charles Jenkins Laboratories | 6420 kHz (6.42 MHz) | None | 1928 | 1931 | 48 | 15 | Mechanical television | None |
W3XK | None | Washington, D.C. | Charles Jenkins Laboratories | 2.0-2.1 MHz | None | 1931 | 1934 | 60 | 20 | Mechanical Television | None |
W9XX, later became W5XA | None | Shreveport, Louisiana | Rev. Lannie W. Stewart | 1604 kHz | None | 1929 | 1934 | 45 | 15 | Mechanical Television | None |
W5XA | None | Shreveport, Louisiana | Paul L. Carriger | 1594 kHz (video on the 160-meter amateur band) | None | 1932 | 1934 | 45 | 15 | Mechanical television | None |
W6XAH | None | Bakersfield, California | Pioneer Mercantile Company | 2000–2100 kHz, also simulcast on 1550 kHz in 1932 | None | January 6, 1932 | 1935 | 96 | 20 | Mechanical television | None |
W9XR[5] | None[6] | Downers Grove, Illinois (Chicago)[5] | Great Lakes Broadcasting/ National Broadcasting Company after 1931.[5][6] | 2.85-2.95 mHz[5] | None | 1929[5] | 1933[6] | 24[5] | 15[5] | Mechanical television[5] | None[5] |
Television stations, from 1928 to 1939 United States and Canada | |||||||||||
Television call-sign (original) |
Television call-sign (current) |
City or location | Owner | Television frequency | Television channel (current) | On air | Off air | Disk holes or lines | frame rate (frame/s) | Original broadcast system | Current broadcast system |
KGFJ | None | Los Angeles | Unknown | ? | ? | 1928 | ? | 48 | ? | Mechanical television | None |
W3XAD | None | Camden, New Jersey | RCA | 124 MHz to 130 MHz | Channel 5 | July 1930 | Became W3XEP | 525 | 30 | Unknown | None |
W6XS | None | Los Angeles | Don Lee Broadcasting | 2.1-2.2 MHz | ? | 1931 | 1935 | 80 | 20 | Mechanical Television | None |
W6XAO | KCBS-TV | Los Angeles | Don Lee Broadcasting | 44.5 MHz (44-50 MHz, Channel 1) | Channel 2 | December 23, 1931 | 1936 | 80 | 20 | Mechanical Television | ATSC |
W7XAO | None | Portland, Oregon | Wilbur Jerman | 2.75-2.85 MHz | ? | 1929 | ? | Unknown | Unknown | Mechanical Television | None |
W9XAA, WCFL | None | Chicago | Chicago Federation of Labor | 2.0-2.1 MHz | None | June 19, 1928 | 1937[2] | 45[1] | 15[1] | Mechanical Television | None |
WIBO-lost license May 15, 1933 AKA W9XAO[3] |
None | Chicago, IL | Western Television (Sanabria)[3] | ? | ? | Summer 1929[4] | 1933 | 45[4] | 15[4] | Mechanical Television | None |
W9XAK | ? | Manhattan, Kansas | Kansas State College | 2.1-2.2 MHz | ? | 1932 | 1939 | 60 | 20 | Mechanical Television | None? |
W9XAL | Unknown | Kansas City, Missouri | First National Television | 2.1-2.2 MHz | ? | 1933 | 1935 | 45 | 15 | Mechanical Television | None? |
W9XAO[3] | None | Chicago, IL | Western Television (Sanabria)[3] | 2.0-2.1 MHz | ? | Summer 1929[4] | 1933 | 45[4] | 15[4] | Mechanical Television | None? |
W9XAP | WMAQ-TV[3] | Chicago, IL | Chicago Daily News/National Broadcasting Company(after 1 November 1931[7]) | 2.1-2.2 MHz | Channel 5 | August 27, 1930[3] | August 1933[3] | 45 | 15 | Mechanical Television | ATSC |
W9XAT | Unknown | Minneapolis, MN | George Young, radio station WDGY | 42-50 MHz, 60-86 MHz (Channel 1) | ? | 1933 | 1938 | 125 | ? | Mechanical Television | None? |
W9XD | WTMJ-TV | Milwaukee, WI | Milwaukee Journal | ? | ? | 1931 (transmitter used for Apex radio station W9XAZ in 1934) | Experiments ended 1933; License deleted in 1938 | 45 | 15 | Mechanical Television- Western | |
W9XG | ? | Lafayette, IN | Purdue University | 2.75-2.85 MHz | ? | 1931 | 1939 | 60 | 24 | Mechanical Television | ? |
W9XK/W9SUI "WSUI", W9XAZ | ? | Iowa City, IA | State University of Iowa | 2.0-2.1 MHz | ? | 1933 | 1939 | 45 | 15 | Mechanical Television | ? |
W9XUI | ? | Iowa City, IA | State University of Iowa | 2.0-2.1 MHz, later Channel 1, then Channel 2 |
? | 1933 | 1941 | 441 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ? |
W2XJT | None | Jamaica, New York | Jamaica Radio Television Company | Channel 3, then Channel 13 | None | 1940, moved to Ch. 13 in 1945 | Unknown | ? | ? | Mechanical Television | None |
VE9EC (also given as VE9AK[8]) | None; TV returned in 1952 with CBFT | Montreal , Quebec | Peck Television Corp. (Canadian Television Ltd.) |
41 MHz | None | 1931 | 1935 | 60-150 | Unknown | Mechanical television | VE9AK's calls were reassigned to CFRB-FM in 1938[9] |
Television stations, from 1928 to 1939 Europe | |||||||||||
Television call-sign (original) |
Television call-sign (current) |
City or location | Owner | Television frequency | Television channel (current) | On air | Off air | Disk holes or lines | frame rate (frame/s) | Original broadcast system | Current broadcast system |
Baird Television Ltd. via BBC transmitter 2LO | Unknown | London, England | Baird Television Ltd. | Unknown | ? | September 30, 1929 | June 1932 | 30 | 25 | Mechanical television | PAL/DVB-T? |
Unknown (Possibly 2LO, as above?) | BBC One | London, England | Baird Television Ltd. | ? | ? | August 22, 1932 | September 11, 1935 | 30 | 25 | Mechanical television | PAL |
Fernsehsender Paul Nipkow | Unknown | Berlin, Germany | Reichs-Rundfunk-Gesellschaft | ? | ? | 1935 (tests started in 1929) | 1944 | 180/441 beginning in 1937 | 25 | Electronic television | PAL? |
Doświadczalna Stacja Telewizyjna | TVP 1 | Warsaw, Poland | Polskie Radio Sp. Akc. | ? | September 1937 (according to other sources regular broadcasts started in 1938) | last week of August 1939 | 120 | 25 | Mechanical television |
Television stations, as of 1941
Television stations, as of 1941 United States | |||||||||||||
Television call-sign (original) |
Television call-sign (current) |
City or location | Owner | Television frequency | Television channel (current) | On air | Off air | Disk holes or lines | frame rate (frame/s) | Original broadcast system | Current broadcast system | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
W1XG | None | Boston | General Television | ? | Channel 1 | Unknown Channel | ? | ? | Unknown | Mechanical television | None | ||
W2XVT (Becomes W2XWV in 1944) | WNYW | Passaic, New Jersey | DuMont | Channel 4 | Channel 5 | 1938 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W2XBS | WNBC-TV | New York City | RCA, NBC | Channel 1 | Channel 4 | 1932 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W2XAB | WCBS-TV | New York City | CBS | Channel 2 | Channel 2 | 1931 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W2XWV | WNYW-TV | New York City | DuMont | Channel 4 | Channel 5 | 1938 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W2XB | WRGB | Schenectady, NY | General Electric | Channel 3 | Channel 6 | 1939 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W3XWT | WTTG | Washington, D.C. | DuMont | Channel 1 | Channel 5 | 1941 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W3XNB | WRC-TV | Washington, D.C. | NBC | Channel 2 | Channel 4 | 1939 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W3XE | KYW-TV | Philadelphia | Philco | Channel 3 | Channel 3 | 1932 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W3XEP | None | Camden, NJ | RCA | 42 MHz-56 MHz and 50-86 MHz | None | 1931 | 1941? | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | None | ||
W3XPF (Portable unit: W10XX) | None? | Philadelphia | Farnsworth | Channel 3 | Unknown | 1937 | Unknown | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | Unknown | ||
W3XPP | Cancelled Permit, Now WCAU | Philadelphia | NBC | Channel 7 | Channel 10 | 1939 | Unknown | None | None | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W6XAO | KCBS-TV | Los Angeles | Don Lee Broadcasting | Channel 1 | Channel 2 | 1936 | Still on air | 441, changed to 525 in late 1941 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W6XYZ | KTLA | Los Angeles | Television Productions | Channel 4 | Channel 5 | 1942 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W6XDL | None | San Francisco, CA | Don Lee Broadcasting | Channel 1 | None | 1941 | Off-Air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | None | ||
W8XCT | WLWT-TV | Cincinnati, OH | Crosley Broadcasting | Channel 1 | Channel 5 | 1939 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W9XV/W9XZV | Became KS2XBS | Chicago | Zenith | Channel 1, then CH 2 |
None | 1939–1941, 1951-1953 as KS2XBS | Off-Air | 441, later 525 | 30 | Electronic television | None | ||
W9XBK | WBBM-TV | Chicago | Balaban and Katz | Channel 2 | Channel 2 | 1940 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | ATSC | ||
W9XMJ | Milwaukee, WI | The Journal Co. | Channel 3 | 1940 | 525 | 30 | |||||||
WMJT | Milwaukee, WI | The Journal Co. | Channel 3 | 1941 | CP returned in 1946 | 525 | 30 |
Television stations, from Jan. 3, 1945 to 1955
Television stations, from Jan. 3, 1945 to 1955 United States | |||||||||||||
Television call-sign (original) |
Television call-sign (current) |
City or location | Owner | Television frequency | Television channel (current) | On air | Off air | Disk holes or lines | frame rate (frame/s) | Original broadcast system | Current broadcast system | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
W6XAO | KTSL (Now KCBS-TV) | Hollywood, California/Los Angeles, California | Don Lee Broadcasting | Channel 1 | 2.1 (UHF 43) | 1931 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
W6XHH | None | Los Angeles | Hughes Tool Company | 2 | None | None | None | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | None | ||
W6XZY | KTLA-TV | Los Angeles | Television Productions, Inc. | 4 | 5.1 (UHF 31) | 1942 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
KSEE | None | Los Angeles | Earl Anthony, Inc. | 6 | None | Unknown | off-air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | None | ||
W6XHT | None | San Francisco, California | Hughes Tool Company | 2 | None | Unknown | off-air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | None | ||
W3XWT | WTTG | Washington, D.C. | DuMont Labs, Inc. | Channel 1 | 5.1 (UHF 36) | 1941 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
WNBW | WRC-TV | Washington, D.C. | NBC | 2 | 4.1 (UHF 48) | 1941 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
W9ZV/W9XZV | None | Chicago, IL | Zenith Radio Corp. | Channel 1, then Channel 2 |
None | 1939–1941, 1951-1953 as KS2XBS | Off-Air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | None | ||
W9XAP | WNBQ-TV 1948-1964[10]
|
Chicago, IL | National Broadcasting Company[7] | Channel 5 | 5.1 (UHF 29) | August 27, 1930[3] | On-Air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical Television | Now ATSC | ||
W9XBK | Became W9XCB, then WBKB, now WBBM-TV |
Chicago, IL | Balaban and Katz Corp. | Channel 2 | 2.1 (VHF 12) | 1940 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
W9XCB | WBBM-TV | Chicago, IL | CBS | Channel 4 | 2.1 (VHF 12) | 1940 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
W9XG | West Lafayette, IN | Purdue University | 3 | None | 1930 | 1946? | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | None | |||
W9SUI | Iowa City, IA | University of Iowa | Channel 1, later Channel 12[11] |
None | 1931 | 1941? | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | None | |||
W1XG | Boston | General Television Corp. | Channel 1 | None | 1931 | 1941? | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | None | |||
W3XEP | None | Camden, New Jersey | RCA | 5, 10, 12 | None | July, 1931 (as portable W3XAD) | 1941? | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | None | ||
W2XVT | WNYW | Passaic, New Jersey | DuMont Laboratories | Channel 4 | 5.1 (UHF 44) | 1938 | Became W2XWV in 1944 | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
W2XWV | WNYW | Passaic, New Jersey | DuMont Laboratories | Channel 4 | 5.1 (UHF 44) | 1944 | Became WABD-TV in 1944 | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
W2XJT | None | Jamaica, New York | Jamaica Radio & TV Corp. | Channel 3, then Channel 13 | None | 1940, moved to Ch. 13 in 1945 | 1947? | Unknown | Unknown | Mechanical television | None | ||
WNBT | WNBC-TV | New York City | NBC | Channel 1 | 4.1 (UHF 28) | 1928 (as W2XBS) | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
WCBW | WCBS | New York City | CBS | Channel 2 | 2.1 (UHF 33) | 1938 (as W2XAB) | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
WABD | WNYW-TV | New York City | DuMont Labs, Inc. | Channel 4 | 5.1 (UHF 44) | 1938 (as W2XVT, then W2XWV) | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | ||
W2XXB | New York City | Bamberger Broadcasting Svc. | 6 | Experimental | |||||||||
W2XMT | New York City | Metropolitan Television Inc. | 8 | Experimental | |||||||||
WRGB | WRGB-TV | Schenectady, NY | General Electric | 3 | 6.1 (VHF 6) | Still on-air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC | |||
W8XCT | Cincinnati, OH | Crosley Corporation | 1 | Experimental | |||||||||
W3XE (later WPTZ) | KYW-TV | Philadelphia | Philco Radio & TV | 3 | 3.1 (UHF 26) | Sept 1, 1941 | On-air | 525 | 30 | Mechanical television | Now ATSC, Westinghouse CBS O&O | ||
W3XAU | Philadelphia | WCAU Broadcasting Co. | 5 | Experimental | WCAU now operates an ATSC commercial station | ||||||||
W8XGZ | Charleston, WV | Gus Zaharis | 1 | Experimental | |||||||||
KS2XBS (First pay-TV service, "PhoneVision") |
None | Chicago, IL | Zenith | 2.1-2.2 MHz, later Channel 2 | None | 1951 | 1953? | 525 | 30 | Electronic television | None | ||
KC2XAK | None, now part of WNBC-TV | Bridgeport, Connecticut | RCA/NBC | UHF 24 | None | December 29, 1949 | August 23, 1952 | 525 | 30 | NTSC-M | None. Parent station is now ATSC | ||
KPTV | KPTV | Portland, Oregon | Empire Coil Company | Channel 27 | 12.1 (VHF 12) | September 20, 1952 | Still on air | 525 | 30 | Used KC2XAK's NTSC-M UHF transmitter, otherwise not experimental. | Now ATSC VHF | ||
KE2XDR | New York City | DuMont Labs | 1950 | 1951 | Mechanical television | None | |||||||
KPHO | KPHO | Phoenix, Arizona | Gray Television | 5 | 5 | 1949 | 525 | 30 |
See also
- Timeline of the BBC
- History of television
- Timeline of the introduction of television in countries
- Timeline of the introduction of color television in countries
- Geographical usage of television
- Moving image formats
- Oldest radio station
- Narrow-bandwidth television
- Prewar television stations
- Television systems before 1940
Individual television stations
- WRGB
- WNBC-TV
- WCBS-TV
- KCBS-TV
- BBC / BBC Television
Broadcast television systems
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 "WCFL Radio Magazine-Fall, 1928-WCFL Is on the air with Television Programs". WCFL/Chicago Fededration of Labor. http://www.earlytelevision.org/w9xaa.html. Retrieved 28 April 2010.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 Godfried, Nathan, ed. (1997), WCFL, Chicago's Voice of Labor, 1926-78, University of Illinois Press, pp. 281–290, ISBN 0-252-06592-1, https://books.google.com/books?id=wd_PDZkvS8cC&dq=dick+biondi&pg=PA284, retrieved 2010-04-06
- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 Samuels. "W9XAP-WMAQ'S Experimental Television Station". Samuels. http://www.richsamuels.com/nbcmm/wmaq/w9xap/index.html. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 4.8 "U. A. Sanabria/transcript of letter from Bill Parker, who was assigned the construction of the television studio at the Daily News building in 1929". Television Experimenters. 28 October 1984. http://www.televisionexperimenters.com/sanabria.html. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7 5.8 "Early Mechanical Television Stations". Early Television Museum. http://www.earlytelevision.org/mechanical_stations.html. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 "Early Chicago Television-Mechanical TV". Hawes TV. http://www.hawestv.com/mtv_chicago/mtv_cgo.htm. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 "Early WMAQ-transcript of article in September 1931 "RCA News"". Radio Corporation of America. http://www.richsamuels.com/nbcmm/wmaq/wmaqnbc.html. Retrieved April 25, 2010.
- ↑ "Peck Mechanical Sets". http://www.earlytelevision.org/peck.html.
- ↑ "Radio Station Histories - Canadian Communications Foundation | Fondation des Communications Canadiennes". http://www.broadcasting-history.ca/listings_and_histories/radio/histories.php?id=419&historyID=200.
- ↑ Samuels. "Roll Opening Credits". Samuels. http://www.richsamuels.com/nbcmm/1968/rollopen.html. Retrieved 22 May 2010.
- ↑ "Television stations authorized by the FCC, January 1, 1941". RCA Radio Travel-Log. 1941. Archived from the original on August 18, 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20120818042243/http://www.earlytelevision.org/prewar_stations.html. Retrieved August 12, 2012.
External links
- 1936 German Olympics
- W1XAY at TVHistory.tv
- European Television Stations in 1932
- Post-war Stations
- W2XJT at EarlyTelevision.org
- Chicago TV
- www.terramedia.co.uk
- www.broadcastpioneers.com
- www.broadcastpioneers.com
- www.chicagotelevision.com
- Milwaukee TV Horror Hosts
- KC2XAK on gginfo.com
- Charles Francis Jenkins at TVHistory.tv
- W3XK in Columbus, OH
- W3XK
- W9XK Experimental Television at the University of Iowa
- List of Mechanical Television Stations at EarlyTelevision.org
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List of experimental television stations.
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