Call signs in Australia
Call signs in Australia are allocated by the Australian Communications and Media Authority and are unique for each broadcast station. The use of callsigns on-air in both radio and television in Australia is optional, so many stations used other on-air identifications.
Australian broadcast stations officially have the prefix VL- and originally all callsigns used that format, but since Australia has no nearby neighbors, this prefix is no longer used except in an international context.
Radio call signs
All radio call signs begin with a single-digit number indicating the state or territory, followed by two or three letters. In most cases, two letters are used for AM stations and three for FM, but there are some exceptions, such as 5UV in Adelaide, which broadcasts on an FM frequency, and 3RPH in Melbourne, which broadcasts on an AM frequency. While some AM stations retained their old call signs when moving to FM, most add an extra letter to the call sign. For instance, when 7HO Hobart became an FM station, it adopted the callsign 7HHO.
Certain ABC radio stations, particularly outside of metropolitan areas, may use five-letter call signs for FM stations: xABCFM for ABC Classic FM, xABCRN for Radio National, and xABCRR for ABC Local Radio - the x being the state number. Also, SBS FM radio stations use a five-letter call sign, xSBSFM. (Sydney and Melbourne's AM stations use 2EA and 3EA, meaning Ethnic Australia.)
There are a number of exceptions:
- For some time, two radio stations used the callsign 4CCC - a commercial station in Charleville and a community station in Warwick, both in Queensland.[1] The Warwick station's call sign was later changed to 4SDB.[2] In addition, a temporary community broadcaster, 4CCC Coral Coast Country Community Radio Inc, uses the name 4CCC, though it does not have a callsign.[3]
- Rebel FM, The Breeze, and Flow FM, which have many transmitters in Regional and Remote Central and Eastern Australia, use the callsigns 4RBL, 4BRZ and 8SAT respectively, regardless of which state their transmitters are located in.[1][2]
- Radio Station 1RPH Canberra, Australian Capital Territory has relay transmitters in New South Wales[1][2]
- The following Victorian stations also have relay transmitters in New south Wales: 3HOT and 3RUM.[1][2]
- The following New South Wales stations also have relay transmitters in Victoria: 2AAY, 2BDR and 2MOR.[1][2]
- The following New South Wales stations also have relay transmitters in Queensland: 2MW and 2TEN.[1][2]
- 8KIN Alice Springs, Northern Territory has a relay transmitter in Pasminco Century Mine, Queensland, and several in South Australia.[1][2]
- 3MBR Murrayville, Victoria has a relay transmitter in Lameroo, South Australia.[1][2]
- The Nhulumbuy, Northern Territory transmitter for triple J has the callsign 6JJJ.[1][2]
- Open narrowcast radio stations have no official call sign, though some stations use one (e.g. 3XY Radio Hellas in Melbourne).
The following are lists of Australian radio station callsigns.
- List of radio station callsigns in the Australian Capital Territory
- List of radio station callsigns in New South Wales
- List of radio station callsigns in Victoria
- List of radio station callsigns in Queensland
- List of radio station callsigns in South Australia
- List of radio station callsigns in Western Australia
- List of radio station callsigns in Tasmania
- List of radio station callsigns in the Northern Territory
Australian radios usually had the positions of radio stations marked on their dials (click the below (up to 1,607 × 506 pixels) for a higher resolution view). This Calstan dial is from a mains operated transistorized radio, circa the 1960s.
Television call signs
Television station call signs begin with two letters usually denoting the station itself, followed by a third letter denoting the state. For example, NBN's call sign stands for Newcastle Broadcasting, New South Wales. There are some exceptions:
- Many ABC television stations outside of state capitals add a fourth letter (and in rare cases a fifth) between AB and the state. This is used to denote the area, e.g. the Newcastle station is known as ABHN, standing for Australian Broadcasting Corporation, Hunter Valley, New South Wales. Some state capital stations follow the same rule as commercial stations, also using AB as the first two letters; for example, ABV is Melbourne's ABC television station.
- Many ABC television stations now have the call sign ABC, regardless of which state or territory they are in.
- SBS television stations all use SBS in their call signs, regardless of the state.
- Commercial station Imparja Television uses IMP, even though they are based in Alice Springs in the Northern Territory.
- CTC's stations in southern New south Wales also use CTC as their call sign.
- CBN and WIN also use CBN and WIN as their respective call signs for stations in the Australian Capital Territory.
- GLV/BCV, AMV and VTV use GLV, BCV, AMV and VTV as call signsin for their respective stations in border areas of southern New South Wales (e.g. Balranald, Deniliquin, Albury North).
- NBN, NEN and NRN stations that serve Murwillumbah, New South Wales, use the call signs NBN, NEN and NRN respectively, even though their transmitters are located in Springbrook, Queensland.
- NBN, NEN and NRN stations in south-east Queensland also use these call signs (e.g. the Gold Coast).
- Central Digital Television stations have the call sign CDT despite only a small fraction of its license area covering parts of Tasmania.
- Southern Cross Central stations in regional and remote central and eastern Australia use QQQ even for stations outside Queensland.
- Various indigenous community television stations in regional and remote Australia have the call sign ACT (for Aboriginal Community Television) even though they're not in Tasmania.
- Open narrowcast television stations have no official call sign.
Amateur radio
Amateur radio in Australia has its own set of call signs, managed by the Wireless Institute of Australia, starting with the prefix VK, the state identifier, and then 2,3, or 4 letters. Foundation licence holders have the letter F after the state identifier e.g.: VK3FGCP indicates a Foundation Licence holder in the State of Victoria.[4]
State indicators
Letters and numbers used by Australian stations:
State | Radio | Television |
---|---|---|
Australian Capital Territory | 1* | C (after Canberra) |
New South Wales | 2* | N |
Victoria | 3 | V |
Queensland | 4 | Q |
South Australia | 5 | S |
Western Australia | 6 | W |
Tasmania | 7 | T |
Northern Territory | 8 | D (after Darwin) |
Papua New Guinea | 9 | P (Prior to independence in 1975), e.g.: 9PM Port Moresby |
Territorial Islands Lord Howe, Norfolk, Christmas, etc. | 2 or 6** | W** |
Antarctica | 0 | |
* Originally, radio callsigns in the ACT had the format 2xx(x), like those in New South Wales. However, newer stations in the territory have been allocated callsigns with the format 1xxx. See List of radio station callsigns in the Australian Capital Territory for more information.
** Formerly 9. Radio stations in Lord Howe Island and Norfolk Island now use the same call sign format as New South Wales. Radio and television stations in Cocos (Keeling) Islands and Christmas Island now use the same call sign format as Western Australia.
See also
External links
- ACMA's AM/FM/DTV broadcast station listings
- Search ACMA's database
- Radio Broadcasters
- Television Broadcasters]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 Radio and Television Broadcasting Stations, Austrlalian Communications and Media Authority, Internet Edition April 2008.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Radio and Television Broadcasting Stations Internet Edition, Austrlalian Communications and Media Authority, January 2013.
- ↑ "Current Temporary Community Broadcasting Licences" (PDF). Australian Communications and Media Authority. January 7, 2013. Retrieved 2013-01-29.
- ↑ "The Wireless Institute of Australia". Wia.org.au. Retrieved 2010-10-13.
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