KCDX

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KCDX
City of license Florence, Arizona
Frequency 103.1 MHz
Format Classic Rock
ERP 95,000 watts
HAAT 614 meters
Class C
Facility ID 16764
Transmitter Coordinates 32°46′44.00″N 110°57′46.00″W / 32.7788889, -110.9627778
Former callsigns KCDX-FM (1993-present)
Affiliations Jones Radio Network
Owner Desert West Air Ranchers Corporation
Webcast Listen Live
Website www.kcdx.com

KCDX (103.1 MHz, licensed in Florence, Arizona) is a radio station broadcasting from Globe, Arizona to the east of Phoenix since March 2002 with a commercial-free rock music format. The KCDX listening area is primarily the eastern half of the Phoenix metropolitan region. The KCDX signal can also be picked up in the northern suburbs of Tucson.[1]

Contents

[edit] Format

The station format is late–1960s to late–1980s album rock. It is fully automated, has no DJs and does not play any commercial announcements other than its own station identification.

[edit] History

KCDX was powered-on by Ted Tucker, a former hospital pharmacist and broadcast-radio engineer, who owns several radio stations in Arizona. He used the signal as a 2.7-kW personal MP3 player, broadcasting to central and eastern Arizona.

The station now has a website with a live Internet feed and a rolling playlist.

On 08/10/2000, Tucker filed a Minor Change to a Licensed Facility Application with the FCC to move the main transmitter to a mountain NW of Oracle, AZ. while increasing power to 95 kW. Three engineering amendments were filed in 2003 and 2004. If approved, the signal upgrade would include new areas of Mesa, Apache Junction and N Tucson in the coverage area. Source: FCC Engineering ('FMQ') Database.

Tucker has remained quiet about the ultimate fate of the station, and seems to have a history of "flipping" properties,[2] so it has been suggested that he may simply be creating value to promote its sale. The growth of KCDX's popularity induced him to duplicate the signal on the 36-kilowatt transmitter of 95.1 KFMR northwest of Phoenix in order to maintain its broadcast license while a sale of that station was pending. The KFMR simulcast lasted from October 2004 until March 2005, when KFMR's license was passed from Tucker to its new owners.

[edit] See also

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ September 2003 article in Phoenix New Times
  2. ^ November 2004 article in Arizona Daily Star

[edit] External links