XHCEP-TV
Celaya, Guanajuato Mexico | |
---|---|
City of license | Celaya, Guanajuato |
Branding | Canal Once Celaya |
Channels |
Analog: 11 Digital: XHCLT-TDT 30.2 |
Owner |
Octavio Arvizu Villegas (Patronato de Televisión Cultural de Guanajuato, A.C.) |
Founded | November 14, 1988 |
First air date | November 14, 1988 |
Call letters' meaning | XH CElaya Patronato (ownership) |
Transmitter power | 200 W[1] |
Height | 30 m (98 ft) |
Transmitter coordinates | 20°31′9″N 100°49′48″W / 20.51917°N 100.83000°W |
Website | tvoncecelaya.com |
XHCEP is a television station on channel 11 in Celaya, Guanajuato, Mexico. XHCEP is owned by a local television group, the Patronato de Televisión Cultural de Guanajuato, A.C.
History
Getting on the air
The channel was founded by Octavio Arvizu Villegas on November 18, 1988, with a test transmission from a 10 watt transmitter in the building “La Torre”, located at the intersection Avenue Adolfo López Mateos and Mutualismo. Mario Muñoz Salinas was the first cameraman; others involved with the channel included René Flores, Ofelia Ramírez, and Francisco Rico.
The testing phase ended one month later, on December 18. In January 1989, the station broadcast via closed circuit to several movie theaters to telecast the inauguration of mayor Javier Mendoza Márquez. On January 11, the Secretaría de Comunicaciones y Transportes received the documentation and official request to operate a television channel.
In September of the same year, Mexican president Carlos Salinas de Gortari visited Celaya, where Canal Once covered the event and utilized the president's appearance in their city to petition the government to resume broadcasting. Canal Once resumed broadcasting for another year.
In August 1990, an incident forced the station to leave the air. Two government inspectors arrived in Celaya, with complaints of interference from Televisa León and its station, XHL-TV channel 11. It was found that an unrelated group was broadcasting on channel 10 out of Celaya, which was causing interference to XHL. The equipment was confiscated, but Canal Once was forced to go off the air as well. A movement began to collect signatures urging the reactivation of the station.
In February 1991, a permit was awarded to give Canal Once channel 4 with 50 watts of power. However, this would have interfered with Televisa stations on channels 3 and 5 (XEZ-TV and XHZ-TV). The government then decided to award channel 9. However, Canal Once, which had broadcast on channel 11 without issues, was able to petition the government to keep its channel 11 signal, and on December 11, 1991, the Patronato finally received permission to build and operate channel 11 in Celaya with the callsign XHCEP-TV. The station broadcasts at an effective radiated power of 200 watts, sufficient to cover Celaya without causing interference to XHL-TV in León or to Televisión Azteca's XHMAS-TV channel 12.
Analog shutoff
XHCEP may not survive the analog shutoff.[2] It does not have the equipment or resources to broadcast its own digital station; XHCEP broadcasts a digital stream through the use of Guanajuato state-owned station XHCLT-TDT (channel 30.2).
References
- ↑ Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de TV. Last modified 2015-04-28. Retrieved 2015-01-15.
- ↑ José Sánchez. "A punto de cerrar el Canal Once de Celaya", El Sol de Bajío 24 January 2013