KGCW (TV)

KGCW


Burlington/Davenport, Iowa-
Rock Island/Moline, Illinois
City of license Burlington
Branding Quad Cities CW
Channels Digital: 41 (UHF)
& KLJB-DT 49.2 (UHF)
Virtual: 26 (PSIP)
Subchannels 26.1 The CW
26.2 This TV
Affiliations Jewelry Television (overnights)
Owner Grant Broadcasting System II
(Burlington Television Acquisition Licensing, LLC)
First air date August 2, 1984
Call letters' meaning Grant CW
Sister station(s) KLJB
Former callsigns KJMH (1984–2001)
KGWB-TV (2001–2006)
KGCW-TV (2006-2009)
Former channel number(s) 26 (UHF analog, 1988–2009)
Former affiliations Fox (1988-2001)
The WB (2001-2006)
Transmitter power 615 kW
1,000 kW (KLJB-DT2)
Height 388 m
343.7 m (KLJB-DT2)
Facility ID 7841
54011 (KLJB-DT2)
Transmitter coordinates
(KLJB-DT2)

KGCW is the CW-affiliated television station for the Quad Cities of Eastern Iowa and West-Central Illinois. Licensed to Burlington, Iowa, it broadcasts a high definition digital signal on UHF channel 41 (virtual channel 26.1 via PSIP) from a transmitter in the Seaton village of Abington Township, Illinois. The station can also be seen on Mediacom channel 13 and in high definition on digital channel 804. Owned by Grant Broadcasting System II, KGCW is sister to Fox affiliate KLJB and the two share studios on East 53rd Street in Davenport, Iowa. Syndicated programming on this station includes Seinfeld, My Name Is Earl, Everybody Hates Chris, and Cash Cab among others. KGCW can also be seen on KLJB's second digital subchannel (UHF channel 49.2 or virtual channel 18.2 via PSIP) from a transmitter in the Orion village of Western Township, Illinois.

Contents

Digital programming

On KGCW-DT2 and Mediacom digital channel 113 is This TV. It can also be seen on KLJB's third digital subchannel (UHF channel 49.3 or virtual channel 18.3 via PSIP).

Channels Name Video Aspect Programming
26.1 KGCW 1080i 16:9 Main KGCW programming / The CW
26.2 KGCW-DT2 480i 4:3 This TV

History

The station signed-on August 2, 1984 as KJMH. It aired an analog signal on UHF channel 26 with an effective radiated power of 200 kilowatts (at a height of 96 meters) from a tower on Wineguard Drive in Burlington. Originally an Independent, KJMH became a charter Fox affiliate on October 6, 1986 and primarily served the southern portion of the Quad Cities market. However, the station suffered interference and duplication from the area's other Fox affiliate, KLJB in Davenport serving the northern portions of the area. Finally in 1996, this station became a full-time satellite of KLJB. In 2001, KJMH broke off and became a The WB affiliate for the Quad Cities and adopted the KGWB-TV call sign.

In September 2006 as a result of The WB and UPN merging to form The CW, the station was picked as the new network affiliate for the Quad Cities. To reflect the change, KGWB adopted the KGCW-TV call letters on June 30, 2006. Meanwhile, the area's low-powered UPN affiliate WBQD-LP joined the other new service, News Corporation's MyNetworkTV. While broadcasting in analog, KGCW's signal failed to cover the Quad Cities adequately because WBQD also transmitted on channel 26 (and still does today). In addition, its coverage area was less than most full-powered UHF outlets in the United States due to its lower effective radiated power and antenna height. However, since 2001, this shortfall has been made up by it being available on cable systems in the area through a fiber optic link and a simulcast on KLJB-DT2.

On December 10, 2009, KGCW added a new second subchannel of its own carrying programming from This TV. Also, it finally changed the PSIP identifier for the main channel on 26.1 from its pre-transition labeling of "KGCW-DT" to its current legal call sign "KGCW" without the "-DT" suffix in it. At noon on February 17, 2009, the station terminated its analog signal on channel 26 and continued digital broadcasts on channel 41. It transferred the "KGCW-TV" calls from its now-defunct analog signal on channel 26 to its digital signal on channel 41 and the "KGCW-DT" call sign was discontinued.

However, it changed the legal Federal Communications Commission (FCC) call sign again to KGCW around the revised digital transition date in June 2009 while continuing to use "KGCW-DT" through PSIP to identify channel 26.1 all the way up until December 2009. The current digital signal had been on-the-air from a new transmitter site near north of Seaton since November 2008 and from the station's original Burlington site on Winegard Drive prior to that. The remainder of the television stations in the Quad Cities terminated analog signals on the new analog shutoff date, June 12.

Newscasts

After sister station KLJB launched a thirty minute prime time newscast produced by the Independent News Network (INN) on December 31, 1999, KGCW began repeating the show (known as Fox 18 Nine O'Clock News) on Tuesday through Saturday mornings at 5. On August 6, 2010, it was made public KLJB terminated its long standing partnership with INN and entered into a news share agreement with ABC affiliate WQAD-TV (owned by Local TV). On September 6, that station began producing a nightly half-hour prime time show on KLJB still known by the same name. KGCW now repeats the previous night's newscast Monday through Friday mornings at 5.

Anchors

Reporters

External links