Warszewo transmitter

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Warszewo transmitter

The transmitter Warszewo (Polish: RSN Warszewo ) is a broadcasting facility of the Polish radio in Warszewo (German: Warsow), a suburb of Szczecin .

The Warszewo transmitter went into operation in 1949 as a self-radiating transmission mast , which used a 113-meter-high, braced steel framework mast with a triangular cross-section that was insulated from earth. The transmission frequency was 1302 kHz until 1950  , then 1259 kHz until 1955, 1304 kHz between 1955 and 1978 and 1260 kHz after the Geneva Wave Plan came into force on November 22, 1978. The Warszewo transmitter could easily be received in large parts of Europe at night due to its transmission power of 160 kW.

On January 2, 1998, medium-wave transmission operations in Warszewo ceased and the transmission mast was converted into a VHF transmission mast. For this purpose, the base point insulator was bridged and the guy ropes were replaced by those without insulators . An antenna mounted on the top of the mast increased the height of the transmission mast to 114 meters.

See also

Programs broadcast

program frequency Transmission power (ERP)
Polskie Radio Program IV 88.40 MHz 1 kW
Radio Złote Przeboje NA FALI 89.8 FM 89.80 MHz 1 kW
Radio Szczecin.fm 94.40 MHz 0.5 kW
Radio Eska Rock 95.70 MHz 1 kW
Polskie Radio Program II 96.30 MHz 1 kW
Radio ESKA Szczecin 96.90 MHz 1 kW
TOK FM 99.30 MHz 0.10 kW
Radio Maryja 101.60 MHz 1 kW
Radio Chilli Zet 104.90 MHz 0.16 kW
program frequency Transmission power (ERP)
TV4 183.25 MHz 0.5 kW

Web links

Coordinates: 53 ° 28 ′ 31 ″  N , 14 ° 32 ′ 38 ″  E