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CHYR-FM is a Canadian radio station, which airs at 96.7 FM in Leamington, Ontario. The station airs a hot adult contemporary format branded as Mix 96.7.


Video CHYR-FM



History

710AM CJSP/Cheer Radio

The station was launched in 1955 by Sun Parlor Broadcasting at 710 AM, as a daytimer with a 250 watt transmitter, using the callsign CJSP. The principal shareholders in Sun Parlour Broadcasting were Al Bruner, John Garton Sr., Lou Tomasi and Art Gadd. The station increased its power to 1,000 watts in 1960. The "SP" in the call sign stood for "Sun Parlour," a nickname for the Leamington/southern Essex County region of Ontario.

In 1967, the station adopted its current callsign, and received approval from the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) to broadcast at nighttime; due to clear channel rules, the station remained on 710 during the day, but shifted to 730 at night. The switch in frequency was called fine tuning time and was accompanied by a Lou Tomasi voiced 60-second audio bed series of varying-pitched beeps which helped the listener re-tune (hopefully) to the station where they would be told "you're back on the beam with Cheer Radio". The nighttime station also used a different callsign, CHIR, but retained the same Cheer branding. During its years of operation on two frequencies, the station had two licenses, one for each call sign. In 1968, the station was sold to Rogers Communications, although Sun Parlour Broadcasting continued to operate as a separate subsidiary.

As "Channel Seven, Cheer Radio," CHYR/CHIR aired a top 40 music format. In the mid seventies they started to spell out the daytime call letters on-air "C-H-Y-R" as well as use the phrase "Super Seven Cheer" and variations with a new Pepper/Tanner jingle package (reportedly as a light poke at the "Big 8" just up the road in Windsor), but overall the format approach and on-air policy was always "bright, tight, brief and real!"

In 1974, the CHIR calls were quietly abandoned, and the nighttime transmitter's call sign instead became CHYR-7. The station increased its nighttime power from 250 to 500 watts that year. In 1975, Keith Dancy acquired Sun Parlour Broadcasting from Rogers, although two years later he sold the station back to Rogers, along with CKJD in Sarnia, in exchange for CHIQ in Hamilton.

Soft AC Years/CHYR Country/Move To FM

In 1987, the station's ownership was spun off to Blue Water Broadcasting, a subsidiary of Maclean-Hunter. That same year, CHYR moved from Top 40 to an adult contemporary format. In 1991, the station adopted a country music format.

In 1993, the station received CRTC approval to move to the FM band. In preparation for the move, most of the AM transmitter towers had to be demolished to make room for the new FM tower; as a result, the 730 frequency was abandoned and the station operated full-time at reduced power on 710 for a few months. The move to FM was completed in July of that year. After a brief period of simulcasting, CHYR ceased operations on 710 kHz at 6 p.m. on September 10, 1993. In 1994, Maclean-Hunter was acquired by Rogers, and The Blue Water group was sold to Blackburn Radio.

96.7 Cheer-FM/Mix 96.7

On April 22, 2001, the station abruptly dropped its country format after 10 years in favor of Hot AC branded as "96.7 Cheer-FM". Market vet Tim O'Neill took over mornings and Corey Robertson arrived in late 2001 for afternoons.

On January 3, 2007, CHYR FM moved its broadcast tower from just outside Point Pelee to a new tower in Cottam, making the signal available to over 70 thousand more homes. On March 3, 2008, the station rebranded as "Mix 96.7"

In 2016, a new station on 96.7 MHz (WNUC-LP) signed-on in the New Center neighbourhood of Detroit, Michigan, causing a substantial reduction in CHYR-FM's signal to Detroit, with interference stretching from Livonia and Redford to Warren and portions of the west end of Windsor.


Maps CHYR-FM



References


Biblioteca Camionera's most interesting Flickr photos | Picssr
src: farm6.staticflickr.com


External links

  • Mix 96.7
  • CHYR-FM history - Canadian Communications Foundation
  • Query the REC's Canadian station database for CHYR-FM

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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