WIN (TV station)

WIN is a television station serving southern New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory. It is the flagship station of the WIN Television network.

WIN
Southern New South Wales & ACT
ChannelsAnalog: see table below
Digital: see table below
BrandingWIN
SloganNow You’re Talking
Programming
Affiliations10
WIN Bold
WIN Peach
Ownership
OwnerWIN Corporation
(WIN Television NSW Pty Ltd)
History
First air date
18 March 1962 (1962-03-18)
Independent (18 March 1962 – 31 March 1989)
Nine Network (1964–1969, secondary, 31 March 1989 – 30 June 2016, primary)
Call sign meaning
Wollongong
Illawarra
New South Wales
Technical information
ERPsee table below
HAATsee table below
Transmitter coordinatessee table below
Links
Websitewww.wintv.com.au

Programming

WIN Television broadcasts its programming from Network 10, includes their regional signals of 10, 10 Bold and 10 Peach. WIN also broadcasts news, current affairs and sport programs such as Studio 10, 10 News First, The Project and Ten Sport throughout this region.

WIN simulcasts the weekday edition of 10 News First from TEN-10 in Sydney, along with the weekend edition from TEN-10 in Sydney.

WIN News

WIN News produces four regional news bulletins for the area markets covered by WIN.

In southern New South Wales, three bulletins for Illawarra & the South Coast, the Riverina and the Central West are produced from newsrooms in Wollongong, Dubbo, Orange, Griffith and Wagga Wagga. Studio presentation for the New South Wales bulletins are recorded from WIN's headquarters in Wollongong with the Canberra bulletin broadcast live.

The New South Wales bulletins are presented by Bruce Roberts and sports presenter Amy Duggan. Bruce Roberts and Amy Duggan also present the Canberra edition.

The head of news in southern New South Wales and the ACT is Stella Lauri.

On 19 June 2019, WIN announced the Axing of the Riverina and Central West news bulletins due to commercial viability, and from then on these areas now broadcast the NSW regional bulletin from Wollongong.

Main transmitters

Region served ch1 DT On-air date Former channel number Analogue Power Digital Power Analogue HAAT Digital HAAT Transmitter Coordinates Transmitter Location
Canberra 31 (UHF) 11 (VHF) 31 March 1989 600 kW 50 kW 362 m 362 m 35°16′32″S 149°5′52″E Black Mountain
Central Tablelands 39 (UHF) 35 (UHF) 30 December 1989 2000 kW 350 kW 627 m 628 m 33°20′32″S 148°59′1″E (analog)
33°20′31″S 148°58′59″E (digital)
Mount Canobolas
Central Western Slopes 32 (UHF) 10 (VHF) 30 December 1989 1000 kW 150 kW 648 m 653 m 31°20′32″S 149°1′22″E Mount Cenn Cruaich
Illawarra 59 (UHF) 36 (UHF) 18 March 1962 4 (1962–1989) 950 kW 250 kW 505 m 600 m 34°37′6″S 150°41′50″E (analog)
34°37′8″S 150°41′49″E (digital)
Knights Hill
South Western Slopes and Eastern Riverina 32 (UHF) 50 (UHF) 30 December 1989 1600 kW 350 kW 525 m 540 m 34°49′13″S 147°54′5″E Mount Ulandra
  • 1. Analogue transmissions ceased as of 5 June 2012 as part of the national shutdown of analogue television


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