WFNO (AM)

WFNO (1540 kHz Radio Tropical Caliente), is a commercial AM radio station licensed to Gretna, Louisiana, and serving the New Orleans metropolitan area.[1] The station is owned by Crocodile Broadcasting and airs a Spanish-language tropical music radio format.

WFNO
CityGretna, Louisiana
Broadcast areaNew Orleans metropolitan area
Frequency1540 kHz
BrandingLatino Mix
Programming
FormatSpanish Top 40 (CHR)
Ownership
OwnerCrocodile Broadcasting
History
First air date
January 31, 1969 (first license granted)
Former call signs
KGLA (1969-2019)
Technical information
Facility ID14538
ClassD
Power1,000 watts daytime only
Translator(s)97.5 K248BB (New Orleans)
Links
WebsiteTropical1540.com

The transmitter is on Industry Street in Harvey, Louisiana. By day, WFNO broadcasts at 1,000 watts, using a non-directional antenna.[2] But AM 1540 is a clear channel frequency reserved for Class A KXEL Waterloo, Iowa, and ZNS-1 Nassau, Bahamas. So WFNO is a daytimer, required to be off the air at night to avoid interference, when radio waves travel farther. Programming is also heard on a 250 watt FM translator in New Orleans.[3] 97.5 K248BB can be heard around the clock, unlike the AM station.

FM translator

WFNO relays its programming to an FM translator. This provides the ability to broadcast WFNO programming around the clock, in high fidelity stereophonic sound. An unusual twist is that the translator's call sign begins with a "K" while the main station's call letters, WFNO, begin with a "W." The Mississippi River is the dividing line in most cases between K and W call signs. But because the river twists through the middle of Louisiana, and Minnesota for that matter, the K-W dividing line is not clearly defined in these two states.

Broadcast translators of WFNO
Call signFrequency
(MHz)
City of licenseFacility
ID
ERP
(W)
ClassFCC info
K248BB97.5New Orleans, Louisiana152263250DFCC

History

As KGLA, WFNO was a Top 40 station prior to its flip to Spanish-language programming in the 1970s. They are also New Orleans' first and oldest Spanish outlet. Initially called Radio Mil, it served as a much-needed link for the growing Hispanic community. The founders of the Spanish-language broadcast at the station were, supposedly, Julio Guichard, from Cuba, and Alberto Carrillo, from Costa Rica. Guichard is no longer involved with the station but has maintained local media presence. Carrillo moved out of New Orleans several years ago, reportedly to the West Coast.

The station has remained faithfully committed to serve the community's interests even while successfully transforming itself into a viable enterprise. It was acquired by a family consortium in the 1980s headed by entrepreneur Ernesto Schweikert. It has recently been awarded all sorts of accolades after its prompt recovery from Hurricane Katrina, reportedly using a small gasoline-powered generator to broadcast emergency messages for those who had no other means of communications in the first few days following the storm.

KGLA swapped call signs with sister station WFNO on August 1, 2019.

References


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