WIN (TV station)
Southern New South Wales & ACT | |
---|---|
Branding | WIN |
Slogan | Turn on WIN |
Channels |
Analog: see table below Digital: see table below |
Affiliations | Ten |
Owner |
WIN Corporation (WIN Television NSW Pty Ltd) |
First air date | 18 March 1962 |
Call letters' meaning |
Wollongong Illawarra New South Wales |
Former affiliations |
independent (1962-1989) Nine Network (1989-2016) |
Transmitter power | see table below |
Height | see table below |
Transmitter coordinates | see table below |
Website | www.wintv.com.au |
WIN is a television station serving southern New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. It is the flagship station of the WIN Television network.
Programming
WIN Television broadcasts its programming from Network Ten, includes our regional signals of TEN, ONE and ELEVEN. WIN also broadcasts news, current affairs and sport programs such as Studio 10, Ten Eyewitness News First at Five, The Project and Ten Sport.
WIN News
WIN News produces four regional news bulletins for the area markets covered by WIN.
In southern New South Wales, three bulletins for Illawarra & the South Coast, the Riverina and the Central West are produced from newsrooms in Wollongong, Dubbo, Orange, Griffith and Wagga Wagga. Studio presentation for the New South Wales bulletins are recorded from WIN's headquarters in Wollongong with the Canberra bulletin broadcast live.
The New South Wales bulletins are presented by Geoff Phillips and sports presenter Amy Duggan. Geoff Phillips and Amy Duggan also present the Canberra edition.
The head of news in southern New South Wales and the ACT is Stella Lauri.
Main Transmitters
Region served | ch1 | DT | On-air date | Former channel number | Analogue Power | Digital Power | Analogue HAAT | Digital HAAT | Transmitter Coordinates | Transmitter Location |
Canberra | 31 (UHF) | 11 (VHF) | 31 March 1989 | 600 kW | 50 kW | 362 m | 362 m | 35°16′32″S 149°5′52″E / 35.27556°S 149.09778°E | Black Mountain | |
Central Tablelands | 39 (UHF) | 40 (UHF) | 30 December 1989 | 2000 kW | 570 kW | 627 m | 628 m | 33°20′32″S 148°59′1″E / 33.34222°S 148.98361°E (analog) 33°20′31″S 148°58′59″E / 33.34194°S 148.98306°E (digital) |
Mount Canobolas | |
Central Western Slopes | 32 (UHF) | 45 (UHF) | 30 December 1989 | 1000 kW | 600 kW | 648 m | 653 m | 31°20′32″S 149°1′22″E / 31.34222°S 149.02278°E | Mount Cenn Cruaich | |
Illawarra & Regional Sydney | 59 (UHF) | 36 (UHF) | 18 March 1962 | 4 (1962–1988) | 950 kW | 250 kW | 505 m | 600 m | 34°37′6″S 150°41′50″E / 34.61833°S 150.69722°E (analog) 34°37′8″S 150°41′49″E / 34.61889°S 150.69694°E (digital) |
Knights Hill |
South Western Slopes and Eastern Riverina | 32 (UHF) | 50 (UHF) | 30 December 1989 | 1600 kW | 600 kW | 525 m | 540 m | 34°49′13″S 147°54′5″E / 34.82028°S 147.90139°E | Mount Ulandra | |
- 1. Analogue transmissions ceased as of 5 June 2012 as part of the national shutdown of analogue television
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