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WSPF-CD

Coordinates:27°49′10.8″N82°15′38″W / 27.819667°N 82.26056°W /27.819667; -82.26056 (WSPF-CD)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Television station in St. Petersburg, Florida

WSPF-CD
CitySt. Petersburg, Florida
Channels
Programming
Affiliations
Ownership
Owner
History
First air date
1989; 36 years ago (1989)[specify]
Former call signs
  • W35AJ (1989–1999)
  • WSPF-LP (1999–2001)
  • WSPF-CA (2001–2012)
Former channel numbers
  • Analog: 35 (UHF, 1989–2012)
  • Digital: 38 (UHF, 2012–2020)
Call sign meaning
St. Petersburg, Florida
Technical information[1]
Licensing authority
FCC
Facility ID11559
ClassCD
ERP9.1 kW
HAAT384.9 m (1,263 ft)
Transmitter coordinates27°49′10.8″N82°15′38″W / 27.819667°N 82.26056°W /27.819667; -82.26056 (WSPF-CD)
Links
Public license information

WSPF-CD (channel 35) is alow-power,Class A television station licensed toSt. Petersburg, Florida, United States, serving theTampa Bay area as anowned-and-operated station ofTri-State Christian Television (TCT). The station's transmitter is located inRiverview, Florida.

History

[edit]
WSPF-CD logo used until 2022, when the América Tevé affiliation moved to the station's fifth subchannel.

The station first signed on the air in 1989 as W35AJ, which originally operated as an owned-and-operated station ofChannel America (in effect, becoming the first network-owned commercial station in the Tampa Bay market). However, the station was operated only intermittently, and would be off the air for weeks at a time. W35AJ was already dark for a couple of years when the St. Petersburg city government acquired the station in February 1995. Until that point, St. Petersburg'sgovernment-access television channel, first established in January 1990, was seen exclusively on cable television on cable channel 15 (since moved to digital channel 615 in December 2007). Prior to then, the city presented some programs on a local origination channel onParagon Cable (since succeeded byBright House Networks andCharter Communications).

Under the ownership of the City of St. Petersburg, the station broadcast City Council meetings and other public service programming for area residents, including the required three weekly hours ofeducational programming mandated by theFederal Communications Commission (FCC). In December 1999, the station's call letters were changed to WSPF-LP. It was eventually upgraded toClass A status, resulting in the callsign being modified to WSPF-CA in 2001.

On November 3, 2011, it was announced that the City of St. Petersburg was in discussions to sell WSPF-CA toMiami Lakes–based broadcast group Prime Time Partners; the company had placed a $500,000 bid to buy the station. Prime Time Partners immediately announced plans to convert the station to digital, with a Spanish-language service broadcasting on channel 35.1. The city announced that the station was up for sale in July 2011, due to the expense of converting the station to digital.[2] The sale to Prime Time Partners was approved by the FCC on May 29, 2012.

On or around June 30, 2012, WSPF-CA signed on its digital signal on UHF channel 38, the frequency formerly used by the analog signal ofWTTA; ironically, the city of St. Petersburg founded the previous occupant of the channel 38 frequency,WSUN-TV, in 1953. In converting to digital operations, the station's call sign was modified to WSPF-CD. In addition, the station relocated its transmitter site to the antenna farm inRiverview. Shortly after digital transmissions began, WSPF-CD began broadcasting MundoFox (nowMundoMax) on 35.1 andinfomercials on 35.2 and 35.3. The city access channel, now known as StPeteTV, continues to be carried within the City of St. Petersburg on Bright House channel 641,WOW! channel 15 orVerizon FiOS channel 20, as well as online; it was originally announced that the city was offered a subchannel of WSPF-CD to continue carrying its city access channel terrestrially, though they ultimately chosen not to use it.[2]

On May 30, 2014, it was announced that WSPF-CD would be carried market-wide on Bright House for its digital cable subscribers, beginning August 1.[3]

Subchannels

[edit]

The station's signal ismultiplexed:

Subchannels of WSPF-CD[4]
ChannelRes.AspectShort nameProgramming
35.11080i16:9WSPF-CDTCT
35.2480iSBNSonLife
35.3SHOPLCShop LC
35.4HSTVHealing Streams TV
35.5WESTWEST
35.6GODTVGOD TV
35.7ONTV4UInfomercials
35.8POSITIVPositiv

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Facility Technical Data for WSPF-CD".Licensing and Management System.Federal Communications Commission.
  2. ^abSt. Petersburg Times: "City's TV channel may have a buyer", November 4, 2011.
  3. ^Bright House Networks ad inTampa Bay Times, May 30, 2014.
  4. ^"RabbitEars TV Query for WSPF".RabbitEars. RetrievedMay 10, 2025.
Full power
Low-power
Outlying areas
  • WYKE-CD 47
    • CTN, Lecanto, repeater of WCLF
Defunct
English-languagebroadcast television stations by affiliation in the state ofFlorida
Includes English-language stations in out-of-state TV markets, but reaching a portion of Florida
ABC
CBS
Fox
NBC
The CW
Ion Television
Independent
PBS
Religious
Other
ATSC 3.0
  • 1 Also has secondary affiliation with MyNetworkTV.
See also
Alabama TV
Georgia TV
Bahamas TV
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