WTRY-FM

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This page is on the current home of WTRY on 98.3 MHz and that frequency's history. For the original home of WTRY and its history at 980 kHz, see WOFX.
Oldies 98.3 WTRY-FM
Image:WTRY 98.3.jpg
City of license Rotterdam, New York
Broadcast area Capital District and Mohawk Valley
Branding Oldies 98.3
Slogan Good Times, Great Oldies
First air date 1987
Frequency 98.3 MHz
Format Oldies
ERP 6 kW
Class A
Callsign meaning W TRoY(original home of station)
Former callsigns WDNZ (1986, not on-air)
WERV (1986-87, not on-air)
WNYJ (1987-89)
WSHZ (1989-92)
WTRY-FM (1992-94)
WYSR (1994-96)
Owner Clear Channel Communications
Website www.wtry.com

WTRY-FM, branded Oldies 98.3, is an oldies station licensed to Rotterdam, New York and serving New York's Capital District and Mohawk Valley. The station is owned by Clear Channel Communications, and broadcasts at 6 kilowatts ERP from a tower in between Altamont and Duanesburg, New York off US Highway 20.

Though the 98.3 frequency has only been on the air since 1987 and has only been running oldies since 1996, the format is a direct continuation of the oldies format (and the Top 40 format from which it evolved) which previously was on 980 kHz, a streak which goes back over 40 years.

[edit] History (of 98.3 FM)

The first decade of the frequency's life was quite unstable, a testement of this can be seen even before the air. In its construction permit stage, 98.3 was to become WDNZ with a dance-pop format, however permit owner Dennis Jackson (now a noted community broadcaster in smaller communities throughout the Northeast) was forced to sell the station before it hit the air. Under new owners, another set of call letters (WERV) came and went before the frequency signed on as Adult contemporary WNYJ in November 1987. Being a new frequency, completely satellite-fed, and going up against a surging WKLI, the frequency was sold in early 1989 and changed its format to oldies as WSHZ (Show FM), adding WACS-FM Cobleskill later that year, which became WSHQ.

Being the FM alternative to (ironically) WTRY, Show FM did well until the launch of WGY-FM as oldies at which both WSHZ/WSHQ and WTRY began to struggle. Looking for a boost, then-WTRY owner Liberty Broadcasting entered into a local marketing agreement with WSHZ in 1992 and flipped 98.3 to a simulcast of 980. This arrangement proved successful, outlasting WGY-FM leaving the format in 1994, though by the end of that year the simulcast ended with 98.3 flipping to 1970s music as WYSR (Star 98.3).

In August 1996, WYSR became an outright sister to WTRY when SFX Broadcasting (which bought Liberty earlier that year) bought WYSR from its local owners. Three months later, the simulcast was restored but with a couple wrinkles: 980 would be simulcasting 98.3 rather than vice versa and 98.3 obtained its own morning show as opposed to Imus in the Morning on 980. This arrangement lasted until September 2000, when 980 flipped to sports radio as WOFX.

In 2005, WTRY-FM upgraded to IBOC digital radio alongside the rest of Clear Channel's Albany stations. On August 17, 2006, WTRY-FM began airing an HD2 channel with a smooth jazz format.

[edit] External link

FM radio stations in the Albany / Schenectady / Troy market (Arbitron Market #62)

In-Town:
88.3 | 89.1 | 89.7 | 90.3 | 90.7/94.9 | 90.9 | 91.5 | 92.3 | 93.7 | 94.5 | 95.5 | 96.3 | 96.7
98.3 | 99.5 100.9 | 102.3 | 103.1 | 103.9 | 104.5 | 104.9 | 105.7 | 106.5 | 107.7

Outside the Metro
Saratoga Springs/Glens Falls and Vermont: 91.9 | 94.7 | 95.9 | 97.5 | 98.5 | 100.3
101.3 | 101.7 | 102.7 | 107.1
Mohawk Valley: 97.3 | 97.7 | 101.9 | 103.5
Columbia/Greene Counties: 93.5 | 97.9 | 98.5

New York State Radio Markets
Albany (AM) (FM) · Binghamton · Buffalo (AM) (FM) · Elmira-Corning · Ithaca · Long Island
New York City (AM) (FM) · Newburgh-Middletown · Olean · Plattsburgh · Poughkeepsie · Riverhead
Rochester (AM) (FM) · Saratoga · Syracuse (AM) (FM) · Utica (AM) (FM) · Watertown
See also: List of radio stations in New York and List of United States radio markets