DYPC

DYPC (88.7 FM) was a radio station owned and operated by Mandaue Broadcasting Center, the media arm of Mandaue City College. It was an affiliate station of Vimcontu Broadcasting Corporation, based in Cebu City. The station's studio and transmitter were located at the Mandaue City College - Main Campus, H. Abellana St., Brgy. Basak, Mandaue.[1]

DYPC
CityMandaue
Broadcast areaCentral Visayas
Frequency88.7 MHz
BrandingDYPC 88.7
SloganAng Sibyaanan Sa Katilingbanon Pagpakabana.
Way Unay!
Programming
Language(s)Cebuano, Filipino
FormatSilent
AffiliationsVimcontu Broadcasting Corporation
Ownership
OwnerMandaue Broadcasting Center
DYLA
History
First air date
June 16, 2013
Last air date
July 2019
Former frequencies
91.8 MHz (2013 - 2015)
91.9 MHz 2015 - 2017)
87.9 MHz (2017)
Call sign meaning
Paulus Cañete
Technical information
Power5,000 watts

History

2013-2015: Campus station

DYPC started its broadcast on June 16, 2013 on 91.8 MHz as a college station of Mandaue City College, an unrecognized and unaccredited private higher education institution owned by Dr. Paulus Mariea L. Cañete. It was known as Cebu's very first campus-based broadcast station when our intention is to broadcast information that educates the public, especially young people and students from around the world aside from music and news at that time. Recently, the station ended its broadcast in late-2014.[2]

2015-2019: Commercial station

On February 3, 2015, DYPC resumes its broadcast on 91.9 MHz, this time under Mandaue Broadcasting Center. The station started carrying a music and news programming, airing news and talk in the morning and music for the rest of the day. At that time, DYPC carried the tagline as "Way Unay!" (lit. like no other).[3]

On August 26, 2015, it was closed down by the National Telecommunications Commission (NTC) for allegedly operating without permit. On August 28, 2015, it resumed its broadcast despite the said warning.[4]

On September 19, 2017, DYPC transferred to 88.7 MHz. It became an affiliate member of Vimcontu Broadcasting Corporation. On December 2017, DYPC upgraded its transmitting power to 5,000 watts.

On July 2019, it went off the air.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.