WHJY

Coordinates: 41°49′40″N 71°22′9″W / 41.82778°N 71.36917°W / 41.82778; -71.36917
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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 174.83.61.127 (talk) at 05:23, 11 January 2020 (I was there when they flipped at 6am and this was the very first song played by DJ Caroline Fox). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

WHJY
Broadcast areaProvidence metropolitan area
Frequency94.1 MHz
(Channel 231)
Branding94HJY
Programming
FormatMainstream Rock
AffiliationsPremium Choice
iHeartRadio
Ownership
Owner
WHJJ, WSNE-FM, WWBB
History
First air date
March 14, 1966
Former call signs
WHIM-FM (March 9, 1966-November 21, 1977)[1]
Call sign meaning
WH JoY (former easy listening format)
Technical information
Facility ID72298
ClassB
ERP50,000 watts
HAAT139 meters (456 feet)
Transmitter coordinates
41°49′40″N 71°22′9″W / 41.82778°N 71.36917°W / 41.82778; -71.36917
Links
WebcastListen live (via iHeartRadio)
Website94hjy.iheart.com

WHJY (94.1 MHz) is a commercial mainstream rock iHeartRadio station in Providence, Rhode Island. WHJY has been a rock station since September 4, 1981.

Its broadcast center, also used by its sister stations, is on Oxford Street, just west of Interstate 95 in Providence, and its transmitter is located on Eastern Avenue in East Providence. (The station's studios are located on the northeast corner of the building, facing I-95, and are sometimes referred to by DJs as "the Ghetto Penthouse.")

History

WHJY signed on March 14, 1966 as WHIM-FM, simulcasting 1110/WHIM, a country music station. The WHIM simulcast lasted through the 1970s until the FM station broke with the AM and became WHJY, "Joy 94", a beautiful music/easy listening station. At Midnight on September 4, 1981, the station flipped to album rock, branded as "94 HJY". The first song on "94 HJY" was "The Spirit of Radio, By Rush.

WHJY and The Station Night Club Fire

WHJY was not the sponsor of the Great White concert at the Station Night Club in West Warwick, Rhode Island on February 20, 2003, but they promoted the event with DJ Michael "Doctor Metal" Gonsalves as emcee. A pyrotechnics display triggered a massive fire, killing Gonsalves and 99 other people and destroying the club. In Gonsalves' memory, the radio station has set up "The Doc Fund," a scholarship with Rhode Island College (his alma mater) to support the victims and families of those affected who attend the school.

Technical

WHJY transmits a 50,000-watt signal from a 550-foot tower[2] (456 feet height above average terrain)[3] at the end of Eastern Avenue in East Providence, Rhode Island. WHJY and WLVO are combined into an Electronics Research Inc. (ERI) SHPX-4BC, 4-bay FM antenna at the top of the tower.[4] The tower is also used as part of the WPMZ AM array, which has a skirt on the tall FM tower, and a shorter, second tower, at the same location.[5][6] WHJY had been transmitting an HD Radio digital signal from this transmitter site as well, from between 2006 through the early 2010s, before ultimately ceasing HD digital transmissions. WHJY no longer transmits in HD digital. Their HD digital signal has been shut off and now the station transmits exclusively in analog stereo FM once again.[7]

WHJY-HD2

Previously, WHJY-HD2 had aired iHeartMedia's "The Alternative Project" (from between 2006 through the early 2010s).[8][9][10]

References

External links