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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

XHTM-TDT
Channels
BrandingLas Estrellas
(The Stars)
Programming
Subchannels2.1 Las Estrellas
2.2 FOROtv
AffiliationsLas Estrellas
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
1952 (1952)
Former call signs
XEQ-TV (1952-1985)
XHTM-TV (1985-2015)
Former channel number(s)
9 (1952-85)
10 (1985-2015)
Call sign meaning
XH Televisión Independiente de México (see article)
Technical information
Licensing authority
IFT
ERP(Altzomoni) 236 kW[1]
Transmitter coordinates19°07′10″N 98°39′13″W / 19.11944°N 98.65361°W / 19.11944; -98.65361
Links
Website[1]

XHTM-TDT is a television station licensed to and broadcasting from Altzomoni, State of Mexico on virtual channel 2. Founded in 1952, it was the second television station built outside of Mexico City and the first relayer of Las Estrellas.

XHTM, along with Canal 5 transmitter XEX, serves one of Mexico's largest television service areas with a string of transmitters stretching from Taxco de Alarcón, Guerrero to Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala, including transmitters in Pachuca, Hidalgo, Cuernavaca, Morelos and San Martín Texmelucan, Puebla. XHTM's digital transmitter was initially located at Televisa's Puebla transmitter site along with the digital operations of its Altzomoni sister stations and both analog and digital signals of Televisa's Puebla independent XHP-TV; in 2015, final digital facilities were built on Altzomoni, coinciding with a power increase from 45 kW to 236.

History

XHTM channel 10 started life with a different callsign and channel number. In late 1952,[2] XEQ-TV channel 9 took to the air; owned by Emilio Azcárraga and bearing the callsign of his XEQ AM radio in Mexico City, it was the second television station outside of the nation's capital (preceded only by XELD-TV in Matamoros) and the nation's fourth. The original concessionaire was Radio Panamericana, S.A., making it a direct sister station to XEQ radio.[3] The transmission from Paso de Cortés (Cortez Pass), 13,405 feet (4,086 m) high, was said to make channel 9 the world's highest television station.[4] The sign-on of XEQ-TV was the first step in the development of a national relay network, reaching an additional three million people. Not long after, Romulo O'Farrill built his own relay station on the mountain, XEX-TV. The establishment of XEQ thus led to Televisa's massive system of relay stations covering most of Mexico.

In 1985, XEX-TV and XEQ-TV were affected by a series of moves that added a VHF channel to the Mexico City area. Mexico City had channel 8, then known as XHTM-TV. XHTM moved to channel 9, taking on the XEQ-TV callsign. A new television station was placed on channel 7, Imevisión's XHIMT-TV. To accomplish this move, XEX-TV was relocated to channel 8 and XEQ-TV to channel 10, picking up the XHTM callsign discarded in Mexico City.[3]

In 1994, XEX and XHTM were joined on the mountain by a third Televisa station, XHATZ-TV (channel 32), as part of a 62-station concession used to help take XEQ-TV's signal national.[5]

Digital operations for Televisa's Altzomoni stations—XEX, XHTM and XHATZ—were based in Puebla proper until 2015.[6]

Repeaters

XHTM operates one of Mexico's most extensive networks of repeaters:

RF Location ERP
36 Ixtapan de la Sal .700 kW[7]
36 Tejupilco de Hidalgo 20 kW[8]
36 Tonatico .700 kW[9]
36 Taxco, Gro. 21 kW[10]
39 Pachuca, Hgo. 8 kW[11]
36 Cuernavaca, Mor. 45 kW[12]
17 Ciudad Serdán, Pue. 0.096 kW[13]
36 Huaquechula, Pue. 2 kW[14]
36 San Martín Alchichica, Pue. 2 kW[15]
36 San Martín Texmelucan, Pue. 20 kW[16]
36 Tlaxcala, Tlax. 30 kW[17]

References

External links

This page was last edited on 14 October 2023, at 22:49
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