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CBN (Australian TV station)

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(Redirected fromRVN-2)

CBN
Channels
BrandingSeven
Programming
AffiliationsSeven(O&O)
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
17 March 1962;62 years ago(1962-03-17)
Former call signs
CWN (for its Central Western Slopes relay until aggregation in 1989)
RVN (for the Riverina station until 1991)
Independent (1962–1989)
Mid State Television (1973–1988)
Call signmeaning
Country
Broadcasting Services Limited
New South Wales
Technical information
Licensing authority
Australian Communications & Media Authority
ERPsee table below
HAATsee table below
Transmitter coordinatessee table below
Links
Website7regional.com.au
7plus.com.au

CBNis an Australiantelevision stationlicensed to, and serving the regions surroundingOrange,Dubboand central and southernNew South Wales.

History

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Origins

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CBN-8 Orange commenced broadcasting on 17 March 1962,[1]licensed toCountry Broadcasting Services,owners of local radio station2GZ.[2]They soon changed their name toCountry Television Services.CWN-6 Dubbo began transmission on 1 December 1965. Also owned by Country Television Services, they became the first station to completely relay another station's programming, although some station identification, such as test patterns, remained separate and program output for CWN originated from CBN's studios in Orange.

In 1968, the stations acquired access to thePostmaster-General's microwave link, allowing viewers to see national news programs and other major events live for the first time. By the early 1970s, the stations began to run into financial difficulties, and it was decided to enter into a joint programming agreement withMTN-9ofGriffith,resulting in the formation of theTelevision 6-8-9network (laterMid State Television).

A 30-minutedocumentaryon the 1978National Rodeo Titles,calledGoin' Down The Road,won the station the 'Outstanding Contribution by a Regional Station'Logie Awardin 1979. Local programming in the 1980s includedFocus,Rural Roundup,Early Shift,Weekend Report,Time to Live,Around The Schools,and coverage of local special events.

Local sports coverage, especially oftennisandrugby,formed a major part of the schedule in the late 1970s and early 1980s. From 1979, the station sponsored, and telecast theUnited Permanent Tennis Tournament,the only tournament of its kind in Australia.

Withaggregationlooming, CBN and CWN were purchased by health care magnatePaul Ramsay's Ramcorp Ltd in 1987, and merged withRVN/AMVto formPrime Television,in May 1988. Local programming and staff levels were reduced - morale at the time was reported[by whom?]to be atan all time low[citation needed].Programming schedules began to resemble those of affiliation partnerSeven,with new facilities built inWollongongandCanberrain preparation for the expansion in coverage area.

Aggregation

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When aggregation in southern New South Wales occurred in 1989, CBN and CWN were effectively merged into one station, CBN, branded on-air asPrime Television.The station then moved into the rest of the new license area, competing againstWIN Televisionand10 Capital.The introduction of the two new stations into Orange was delayed by technical problems, and did not start in the area until later in the year.[citation needed]

In 1991, the Wagga Wagga and Orange licenses were merged into the one license, withRVNtaking on the CBN callsign.

Seven News

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CBN produces and broadcasts two 30-minuteSeven Newsbulletins (former names includePrime7 NewsandPrime News) bulletins for the Central West (Orange/Dubbo) and Wagga Wagga regional markets, each weeknight at 6 pm and is co-presented by Madelaine Collignon and Nick Hose, with Kirstie Fitzpatrick presenting the weather. As of April 2015, both bulletins are pre-recorded.

In the Wollongong and Canberra regional markets, short two-minute updates are presented by Pip Waller, with weather forecasts fromDaniel Gibson.

For many years, these markets took Sydney'sSeven Newsbulletin for the 6 pm primetime news hour, and formerly had dedicated news bulletins produced and headquartered in their respective areas.

Since August 2010, production of Seven News for the Orange and Wagga Wagga markets moved to Seven's Canberra headquarters. The two bulletins alternate between live transmission and being pre-recorded, prior to the addition of the North West and North Coast bulletins on 27 April 2015, due to the closure of the Tamworth broadcast studios on 24 April. On that same day, a renovated news studio was introduced for both bulletins.[3]However, with the centralisation of all bulletins, the alternate live-recorded format for southern NSW was displaced to the live North West (and later, the live North Coast) bulletin.

CBN is the home network for the statewide7News at 6:30service launched for then Prime7 in 2014, and is broadcast from the Canberra studios. Presented byDaniel Gibson,it carries many of the national and international news items from the metropolitan news broadcasts, and only airs in areas served by the station and its Northern NSW sisterNENthat receive a full localSeven Newsservice.

Main Transmitters

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Region served City Channels
(Analog/
Digital)
First air date ERP
(Analog/
Digital)
HAAT
(Analog/
Digital)
[note 1]
Transmitter Coordinates Transmitter Location
Canberra Canberra 34 (UHF)[note 2]
12 (VHF)
31 March 1989 600kW
50 kW
362 m
345 m
35°16′32″S149°5′52″E/ 35.27556°S 149.09778°E/-35.27556; 149.09778(CBN) Black Mountain
Central Tablelands Orange 8 (VHF)[note 2]
37 (UHF)
17 March 1962 200 kW
570 kW
620 m
628 m
33°20′31″S148°58′59″E/ 33.34194°S 148.98306°E/-33.34194; 148.98306(CBN) Mount Canobolas
Central Western Slopes[note 3] Dubbo 6 (VHF)[note 2]
41 (UHF)
1 December 1965 400 kW 638 m 31°20′32″S149°1′22″E/ 31.34222°S 149.02278°E/-31.34222; 149.02278(CBN) Mount Cenn Cruaich
Illawarra&Regional Wollongong Wollongong 65 (UHF)[note 2]
38 (UHF)
31 March 1989 950 kW
250 kW
619 m
600 m
34°37′23″S150°41′39″E/ 34.62306°S 150.69417°E/-34.62306; 150.69417(CBN)(analog)
34°37′8″S150°41′49″E/ 34.61889°S 150.69694°E/-34.61889; 150.69694(CBN)(digital)
Knights Hill
South Western Slopesand EasternRiverina[note 4] Wagga Wagga 2 (VHF)[note 2]
47 (UHF)
19 June 1964 200 kW
600 kW
528 m
540 m
34°49′13″S147°54′5″E/ 34.82028°S 147.90139°E/-34.82028; 147.90139(CBN) Mount Ulandra

Notes

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  1. ^HAATestimated fromhttp://www.itu.int/SRTM3/using EHAAT.
  2. ^abcdeAnalogue transmissions ceased as of 5 June 2012 as part of the national shutdown of analogue television
  3. ^The Central Western Slopes station was a relay of CBN with the callsign CWN from its 1965 sign-on until aggregation in 1989.
  4. ^The South Western Slopes and Eastern Riverina station was an independent station with the callsign RVN from its 1964 sign-on until aggregation in 1989.

References

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  1. ^"Central West and South get" telly "".Australian Women's Weekly.Vol. 29, no. 42. 21 March 1962. p. 19.Retrieved21 June2021– via National Library of Australia.
  2. ^"Television Station For Orange".Western Herald.New South Wales, Australia. 11 November 1960. p. 1.Retrieved21 June2021– via National Library of Australia.
  3. ^"Prime7 announces Freya Cole as new presenter of Wagga's No.1 news service"(PDF).Prime Media Group.23 April 2015.Archived(PDF)from the original on 17 April 2021.Retrieved21 June2021.
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