CIMN-FM
This articleneeds additional citations forverification.(December 2021) |
Defunct | |
---|---|
Programming | |
Format | Campus radio |
Ownership | |
Owner | U.P.E.I. Student Radio Inc. |
Operator | UPEI Student Union |
History | |
First air date | 1970 (low power) 1995 (FM) |
Last air date | 2000 |
Former call signs | CSUR |
Call signmeaning | CampusInformationMusic &News |
CIMN-FMwas a Canadiancampus radiostation at theUniversity of Prince Edward IslandinCharlottetown,Prince Edward Island.
The station began as a "very low power broadcast station", known as Radio UPEI and operated from the top floor of the administrative building in 1970. The transmitters were home-made and of solid state design. In 1972, theUPEI Student Unionfunded upgrades to acarrier currentsystem operating on 700 kHz using the callsign CSUR. This conflicted with international callsign allocations (theITU prefixCS is assigned toPortugal,not Canada), so a new application was made for the callsign CIMN (Campus Information Music & News).
A series of transmitters, using the electrical wiring of buildings as the antenna system, were located in the various residences. A set of control rooms and production studios located on the 4th floor of Main Building remained in operation for a number of years. At that time, the station had a station manager, and a news director, paid for by the Student Union. The station also began to simulcast audio via the localcable televisionsystem into homes in the area.
In 1982, the studios were moved to the Barn, which housed student union offices and student activity areas on campus.
The station received a fullFMlicense in 1995 to broadcast at 90.3 FM,[1]and at this point, legal problems began. CIMN became the first Canadian station without a full-time staff person to be granted a broadcast licence by theCanadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission(CRTC).
The licence expired in August 2000 and was not renewed.[1]
References
[edit]External links
[edit]- CIMN-FMat The History of Canadian Broadcasting by theCanadian Communications Foundation