North American call sign
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Many countries have specific conventions for classifying call signs by transmitter characteristics and location. The North American call sign format for radio and television call signs follows a number of conventions. All call signs begin with a "prefix" assigned by the International Telecommunications Union. For example, the United States has been assigned the following prefixes: AAA–ALZ, K, N, W. For a complete list, see International Callsign Allocations.
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[edit] United States
In the United States, broadcast stations have call signs between three and six characters in length, though the minimum length for new stations is four letters. An additional suffix may also be added, indicating a specific broadcast service type. Full-power stations receive four-letter call signs, while broadcast translator stations usually receive call signs with five or six characters, including two or three numbers. Generally, call signs begin with K west of the Mississippi River, and W to the east.
New full-power stations were formerly assigned sequential call signs if the permittee does not choose one of their own; these were always four letters, of which the third was the least-significant digit and the second was the most-significant digit of the sequence number. (Callsigns which were already assigned are skipped in the sequence.) Hence, many very early stations, like WMAQ Chicago (now WSCR) and WMAF Round Hill, South Dartmouth (now defunct) were assigned W-A- or K-A-) call signs. The current FCC rules require a permittee to explicitly select a callsign before putting a station on the air for the first time. Prior to that time, permits for new stations are either listed simply as NEW, or referenced by the file number of the original application, in the FCC's public records.
[edit] Short call signs
In the 1920s, many stations were assigned three-letter call signs; these have been grandfathered under the current system, even though many such stations have changed owners. Such stations include KOA in Denver, Colorado, WGN in Chicago, Illinois, and WRR in Dallas, Texas. (WRR is an unusual case in that the call sign was moved from the original AM station to a commonly owned FM station, formerly WRR-FM, before the AM was sold.) The Federal Communications Commission for many years maintained a policy of "drop it and lose it forever" with respect to three-letter call signs, but recently allowed KKHJ (930 Los Angeles) to reclaim its historic three-letter call, KHJ.
The FCC allows FM and TV stations under common ownership with a three-letter AM or FM in the same market to use five-letter (three plus –FM or –TV suffix) call signs; for example, KGO-TV in San Francisco or WMC-FM in Memphis. In some cases, such as WIL-FM in St. Louis, the five-letter callsign may outlive the three-letter call sign on which it is based. There is also the unusual case of Baltimore's WJZ-TV, which was allowed to adopt the call sign despite the fact that there was no longer a WJZ radio; when there was, it wasn't in Baltimore; and it hadn't been owned by the same company since the 1920s. Stations which have been "conformed" in this manner may keep the five-letter call sign even after they are no longer co-owned with the "parent" station (although this was not the case prior to the mid-1980s).
Extremely early call signs used in the 1910s and into the early 1920s were arbitrary. The U.S. government began requiring stations to use three-letter call signs around 1912, but they could be chosen at random. KDKA initially broadcast as 8XK before gaining its well-known letters in 1920. The Rosicrucian Order, AMORC of San Jose, California used the call sign 6KZ.
[edit] K and W
New broadcasting stations are assigned call signs beginning with K, if they are west of the Mississippi River, and beginning with W if they are east of the river. Again, some early stations have been grandfathered, so there are four broadcasters with a K prefix east of the Mississippi, and a few dozen with a W on the west side. (There are more grandfathered W stations because the dividing line used to be two states farther west.) Some examples would be KDKA in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, KYW in Philadelphia, and WACO in Waco, Texas, which also has the distinction of being one of only two radio stations whose call sign is the same as its community of license.[1] Stations located near the Mississippi River may have either letter, depending on the precise location of their community of license and on historical contingencies. Minnesota and Louisiana, are allowed to use both call letter prefixes since the Mississippi river flows through both states rather than forms their borders. Metro areas that straddle different states on both sides of the river, such as Saint Louis, Memphis and the Quad Cities area of Iowa/Illinois, have stations with both call letter prefixes, due to the stations' towers themselves being placed on either side of the river. [[1]]
The FCC allows derived call signs in the same market as a commonly-owned AM or FM without respect of the boundary, so stations may establish common branding across bands and services. One famous example was the case of the former KWK in St. Louis, which after several petitions was permitted to change the call sign of its sister FM station in Granite City, Illinois, then WWWK(FM), to KWK-FM. Later, the AM would change its call sign and the FM became KWK(FM), thereby becoming an exemplar of both categories of grandfathered stations.
The assignment of K and W prefixes applies only to stations in the broadcast radio and television services; it does not apply to weather radio, highway advisory radio, or time signal stations, even though these are all broadcasts in the usual sense of the word, nor does it apply to auxiliary licenses held by broadcast stations, such as studio-transmitter links and inter-city relay stations.
For example, the time signal stations WWV and WWVH are located in Colorado and Hawaii, respectively. (WWV originally began in Maryland and was later moved west. However, even ignoring that fact, U.S. government-owned stations are overseen by the NTIA and not the FCC, and are thus not subject to the FCC's rules on call signs; most do not have call signs at all.)
NOAA Weather Radio stations clustered between 162.4 and 162.55 MHz have call signs consisting of a K or W followed by two or three letters, and two digits. The K and W prefixes are both used interchangeably on both sides of the Mississippi River (e.g., KHB36 in Washington, D.C. and WXK25 in El Paso, Texas).
Highway advisory radio stations scattered throughout the AM band use call signs consisting of K and W followed by two or three letters and three digits. As with weather radio, K and W calls are both used on both sides of the Mississippi River.
Call signs in the western United States are often confused with International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) airport codes because both make use of four-character codes that begin with the letter K. Examples include KSFO (which simultaneously refers to San Francisco International Airport and KSFO (AM) radio), KLAX (which simultaneously refers to Los Angeles International Airport and KLAX-FM), and KDFW (which simultaneously refers to Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport and KDFW-TV).
[edit] Suffixes
FM radio and television call signs may be followed by a dash and the two-letter class of station: –FM, –LP, –TV, or –CA. For digital television, the –HD and later –DT suffixes are usually not used (one exception being KKYK-DT), as the digital channel is not usually licensed separately from the analog. (Some radio owners using the iBiquity HD Radio IBOC system have expressed a desire for –HD call signs, but this is unlikely to happen because HD Radio is a subcarrier service on the same frequency.) Occasionally, an FM or TV station may have one or more boosters, which amplify and reradiate the main station's signal to overcome terrain obstacles. In this case, the main portion of the call sign remains the same (unlike translators), and the boosters are given sequential numeric suffixes like –FM1, –TV2, –3, and so forth.
It should be noted that the -FM or -TV suffix is not required to be assigned to TV or FM stations, except where there is another station that shares the same 3- or 4-letter base call sign. AM radio stations never have an -AM suffix.
Low-power TV and FM stations share the –LP suffix. Class A TV stations, which are LPTV stations that receive protection from interference by primary stations, use the –CA suffix. When low-power and class-A TV stations operate in ATSC digital, they instead receive the suffixes –LD and –CD, respectively.[2]
[edit] Translators
FM and TV translator stations are assigned sequential call signs. They use an appropriate initial letter followed by a two- or three-digit channel number, and then a two-letter sequential suffix. For example, a TV translator on channel 4 might have the call sign K04AX (though it is much less common for TV translator channels to be between 2 and 13). Digital translator stations are assigned call signs in the same manner, except that the letter D is appended (e.g., K04AXD). The FM band also has channel numbers starting at the number 200 (or 201 for practical purposes), although they are almost unknown to regular listeners who usually tune in to a station based on its frequency. W201AA was the first FM translator at 88.1 MHz, for example. Such call signs are never reused by another station.
[edit] Station identification
Many stations prefer not to use call signs at all, since a slogan is more easily remembered by listeners (and those filling in diaries for the Arbitron radio ratings). However, in the U.S., the Federal Communications Commission does require periodic identification using the formal call sign, as close to the top of each hour as possible, at a "natural break in programming"; this rule is now rarely enforced. Stations are also required to identify their community of license.[3] There are some unusual cases, though, such as the low-frequency WWVB time station. Because of the station's narrow signal, that station only broadcasts a one bit per second signal that cannot usually be understood by humans, so the station is identified by shifting the broadcast carrier wave's phase by 45° twice an hour (see Phase-shift keying). A common method of identification by radio is along the lines of call sign, frequency, and owner (for example: "KQKS Lakewood/Denver: A Lincoln Financial Group Station. This is KS1075".)
It is fairly common for stations to choose a call sign that can be transformed into a name, such as Boston's WXKS-FM (107.9 Medford), one of many Clear Channel Communications-owned stations that call themselves "KISS." In other instances, the letters may be an initialism for a name or slogan. Some of the most famous of these include WGN, owned by the Chicago Tribune, which stands for "World's Greatest Newspaper", WIS in South Carolina, which stands for "Wonderful Iodine State," and WISN, which dually stands for the station's original owner, the Wisconsin News, and the station's location in Wisconsin. Stations operated by schools and universities may adopt their school's "initials" into the call sign, such as WWVU in Morgantown, WV, the university-owned radio station of West Virginia University.
[edit] Experimental, amateur, and non-broadcast stations
United States amateur radio call signs are issued with one or two letters, followed by a single digit, and then one to three more letters. Generally the shorter the call (up to a 1x2 or 2x1 format) the higher the grade of license, but an amateur who upgrades is not required to change his or her callsign. In any case some of the available blocks have been used up. The 1x1 callsigns, such as K6O, are for short-term special event stations. Outlying areas have special calls. For example, those issued in Hawaii can (like other U.S. callsigns) start with A, K, N, or W, but then will have H6 or H7 before the 1–3 additional letters. Other Pacific possessions use other H numbers; a Guam station could be KH0–. Alaska has L as the second prefix letter, and Caribbean stations use P.
The number in the call refers to one of the 10 radio districts into which the U.S. is divided, but that only indicates where the license was issued. It is no longer necessary for a U.S. ham to change callsigns when moving to a new district. Most amateurs going to an exotic location will sign/(prefix) to show their location. Thus a station visiting American Samoa could be (regular call)/KH8. American amateurs are also permitted to operate in Canada under their own call signs with a location indicator.
Amateur stations are required to identify themselves by their call sign once every ten minutes during a transmission and at the end of the transmission.[4]
Experimental stations use call signs out of the amateur radio sequence, with the letter following the region digit required to be an X. (All VHF stations before World War II were licensed as experimental stations.) Notable experimental stations included Major Armstrong's FM station W2XMN in Alpine, New Jersey; Powell Crosley's 500-kW superpower AM W8XO, operating nights only with WLW's programming and frequency from Mason, Ohio; and Don Lee's pioneering television station, W6XAO in Los Angeles. (Synchronous "booster" transmitters for AM stations are still considered experimental in the U.S., despite fifty years of experience in Europe, and new experimental call signs are being assigned for new licenses even now, by inserting a region digit and the letter X into the parent station's call sign.)
[edit] US Territories
Puerto Rico, Navassa Island, and the US Virgin Islands all use the American standard call signs of W (being east of the Mississippi River). Guam and the Northern Mariana Islands use K. American Samoa uses K as well, but WVUV was grandfathered in, and remains as an AM radio station; the low-power TV station that was WVUV-LP changed its callsign to KKHJ in 2008.
[edit] Canada
Canadian broadcast stations are assigned a three-, four-, or five-letter call sign (not including the –FM or –TV suffix) beginning with CB, CF, CH, CI, CJ, CK, VA–VG, VO, VX, or VY. The CB series calls are assigned to Chile by the ITU, but Canada makes de facto use of this series anyway for stations belonging to, but not exclusively broadcasting programs from, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation [2]. Several other prefixes, including CG, CY, CZ and the XJ to XO range, are available, but are not currently in use. Conventional radio and television stations almost exclusively use C call signs; with a few exceptions noted below, the V codes are restricted to specialized uses such as amateur radio.
Special broadcast undertakings such as Internet radio, cable FM or closed circuit stations may sometimes be known by unofficial call signs such as "CSCR". These are not governed by the Canadian media regulation system, and may at times reflect call signs that would not be permissible on a conventional broadcast platform.
Four-letter call signs are the norm. Three-letter call signs are only permitted to CBC Radio stations or to commercial stations which already had a three-letter call sign before the current rules were adopted, and five-letter call signs exclusively identify CBC transmitters (which may be either rebroadcasters or SRC O&Os outside of Quebec.)
Stations of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation or Société Radio-Canada tend to identify themselves as "CBC Radio One/Two" (English-language) or "La Première Chaîne/Espace Musique" (French-language) of a city, although they do have official three- and four- letter call signs. These generally (but not always) begin with CB.
Callsigns with four digits preceded by VF (for radio) or CH (for television) are only assigned to very-low-power local rebroadcasters; VO callsigns may only be used commercially by stations in Newfoundland and Labrador which were licensed before that province joined Canadian Confederation in 1949 (VOCM, VOAR and VOWR broadcast from St. John's long before Confederation). Only one station, VOCM-FM, has been allowed to adopt a VO callsign after 1949; it was granted the VOCM calls because of its corporate association with the AM station.
All Canadian FM stations have an –FM suffix, except for low-power rebroadcasters which have seminumeric VF callsigns. Higher-power rebroadcasters are generally licensed under the callsign of the originating station, followed by a numeric suffix and, for FM rebroadcasters of an AM station, a –FM suffix; for example, CJBC-1-FM rebroadcasts CJBC (860 Toronto), whereas CJBC-FM-1 rebroadcasts CJBC-FM (90.3 Toronto). Some rebroadcasters, however, may have their own distinct callsigns. Canadian TV stations always have the -TV suffix, with the exception of those CBC-owned stations which have a call sign in the CB-(-)T format.
For rebroadcasters which use a numeric suffix, the suffixes usually follow a 1–2–3 numeric sequence which indicates the chronological order in which rebroadcast transmitters were added. There are some cases where television rebroadcasters are suffixed with the channel number on which the transmitter broadcasts (for instance, CIII-TV's rebroadcasters are numbered with their channel assignment rather than sequentially), but this is not generally the norm.
Experimental television stations in Canada have callsigns beginning with VX9.
Canadian broadcast stations are required to identify by callsign hourly, but not at any specific time, and this rule is even more rarely enforced than the U.S. rule (see above).
Canadian amateur radio stations generally begin with VE, although some use VA. The number following these letters indicates the province, going from VA1/VE1 for Nova Scotia, VA2/VE2 (Québec), VE3/VA3 (Ontario) through VA7/VE7 for British Columbia and VE8 for the Northwest Territories, with latecomer VE9 for New Brunswick. (VE1 used to be for all three Maritime Provinces.) VE0 is for maritime mobile amateur transmissions. VY1 is used for the Yukon Territory, VY2 for Prince Edward Island, and VY0 for Nunavut. CY0 is used for Sable Island and CY9 for St. Paul Island. Special prefixes are often issued for stations operating at significant events.
The Dominion of Newfoundland prefix VO remains in active use by amateurs in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador, VO1AA atop Signal Hill in St. Johns being the most famous amateur station. Radio amateurs on the Island of Newfoundland use calls beginning with VO1, while Labrador amateurs use VO2. A popular backronym for VO stations is "Voice Of...", although this is not the VO prefix's official meaning.
[edit] Mexico
Mexican broadcast stations are assigned a three-, four-, five-, or six-letter callsign beginning with XE (mediumwave and shortwave) or XH (FM and TV). Some FM and TV stations (like XETV) are grandfathered with XE callsigns and a –FM or –TV suffix. Mexican stations are required to identify twice an hour, at both the top and the bottom. Mexican stations broadcasting English-language programming are in addition required to play the Mexican national anthem every day at midnight local time. As in Canada, stations that rebroadcast other stations have the same callsign, but with a different number at the end (such as XEMN and XEMN-1).
Amateur radio stations in Mexico use XE1 for the central region, XE2 for the northern region, and XE3 for the southern region. XF prefixes indicate islands. Special callsigns for contests or celebrations are occasionally issued.
[edit] Bermuda, Bahamas, and the Caribbean
The islands of the Bahamas and Bermuda have the call sign prefixes of VS and Z, pertaining to their status as former (and in the case of Bermuda, current) colonies of the United Kingdom, sharing the UK and other colonies' reserved call letter of Z.
All of the former British West Indies colonies share the VS, ZB–ZJ, ZN–ZO, and ZQ prefixes. The list is as shown:
- Anguilla
- Antigua and Barbuda
- Bahamas (also has the C6 Prefix)
- Barbados
- Bermuda (also uses VS)
- British Virgin Islands
- Cayman Islands
- Dominica (Commonwealth of Dominica, also uses J7)
- Grenada (also uses J3)
- Jamaica
- Montserrat
- St. Kitts and Nevis
- St. Lucia (also uses J6)
- St. Vincent and the Grenadines (also uses J8)
- Turks and Caicos Islands
[edit] Cuba
Cuba uses the prefixes CL–CM, CO, and T4.
[edit] Dominican Republic
The Dominican Republic uses the prefixes HI–HJ.
[edit] Netherlands Antilles
The Kingdom of the Netherlands use the PA–PI prefixes, while the Netherlands Antilles use the PJ prefix.
[edit] Trinidad and Tobago
The island nation of Trinidad and Tobago use the 9Y–9Z prefixes.
[edit] References
The rules governing call signs for stations in the United States are set out in the FCC rules, 47 C.F.R. chapter I. Specific rules for each particular service are set out in the part of the rules dealing with that service. A general overview of call sign formats is found at 47 C.F.R. . Rules for broadcast callsigns are principally defined in 47 C.F.R. .
[edit] External links
- Tophour.com - Top-of-the-hour station identifications with call signs from American AM and FM radio stations
- Military Callsigns