WVAW-LD

WVAW-LD
Charlottesville, Virginia
Branding ABC 16 (general)
CBS 19 News
CBS 19 (on DT2)
Slogan Where Charlottesville
News Comes First
Channels Digital: 16 (UHF)
Subchannels 16.1 ABC
16.2 CBS
Owner Gray Television
(Gray Television Licensee, Inc.)
Founded 1979
Call letters' meaning VA (Virginia postal abbreviation)
Sister station(s) WCAV, WAHU-CD, WHSV-TV
Former callsigns W64AO (1979-2004)
WVAW-LP (2004-2009)
Former channel number(s) 64 (UHF analog, 1979-2004)
16 (UHF analog, 2004-2009)
Transmitter power 15 kW
Height 324 m
Facility ID 4687
Website newsplex.com

WVAW-LD is the low-powered ABC-affiliated television station for Charlottesville, Virginia. It broadcasts a high definition digital signal on UHF channel 16 from a transmitter on Carters Mountain. The station can also be seen on Comcast channel 3 and in high definition on digital channel 210. Owned by Gray Television, WVAW is sister to CBS affiliate WCAV and low-powered Fox affiliate WAHU-CD.

All three share studios, known as the "Charlottesville Newsplex", on 2nd Street Southeast in Downtown Charlottesville. In addition, some behind-the-scenes duties are run alongside that of sister station WHSV-TV in Harrisonburg (which the "Newsplex" has a resource sharing alliance with). Syndicated programming on the station includes: Inside Edition, Ellen, The Real Housewives of New York City, and The Wendy Williams Show.

Contents

Digital programming

On WVAW-DT2 is a standard definition simulcast of WCAV.

Channel Video Aspect Programming
16.1 720p 16:9 main WVAW programming/ABC HD
16.2 480i 4:3 WCAV "CBS 19"

History

What is now WVAW-LD originally began in 1979 on analog UHF channel 64 with the call sign W64AO. The station was a low-powered repeater of WHSV which was the area's default ABC affiliate even though Richmond's WRIC-TV puts a strong signal into Charlottesville. In 2004, W64AO moved to UHF channel 16, gained the WVAW-LP call letters, and became the market's first ABC affiliate not long after WCAV signed-on. However, it was still officially licensed as a translator station according to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC).

In early-2005 after the launch of WCAV and WVAW, Gray Television launched a third station in the area, Fox affiliate WAHU-CA. Since 2006, the three have been the official flagships of University of Virginia sports. WVAW was temporarily taken off-the-air by a fire on its transmitter tower at the top of Carters Mountain on November 9, 2006. The signal was restored on November 13. On December 28, WVAW moved to Comcast channel 3. After performing a flash-cut, the station replaced its analog signal with a 15 kW digital signal on the same frequency on February 16, 2009. It also changed its calls to the current WVAW-LD with "LD" standing for low-powered digital.

Of all of the Richmond and Washington, D.C. stations replaced on the main tier for the new Charlottesville ABC, CBS, and Fox affiliates, only WTTG survived. On Comcast digital cable, Richmond channels include WRIC and WTVR-TV. WUSA is not on digital cable nor is any other district station. Other Comcast systems north and west of Charlottesville do pick up Washington and Richmond locals either on the main tier or digital lineup. On October 27, 2009, WVAW's digital transmitter had a glitch over-the-air. The signal was put on WAHU-DT2 for a short time and the problem was fixed a day later.

Newscasts

WVAW and its sister stations employ the largest television news team dedicated exclusively to the Charlottesville market. While WVIR dedicates some staff to adjacent areas, WVAW focuses its coverage solely on the counties that comprise the Charlottesville viewing area. As the primary station in the "Charlottesville Newsplex" operation, WCAV airs the most newscasts. WVAW simulcasts the second hour of Good Morning Charlottesville on weekday mornings, Charlottesville Tonight weeknights at 7, and CBS 19 News Nightcast weeknights at 11. It also simulcasts news from WCAV on weeknights from 5 until 6:30.

Anchors

Weather Authority Meteorologists

Sports

Reporters

External links