WEYS-LD

Last updated
WEYS-LD
ATSC 3.0 station
ALMAVISION LOGO.JPG
Channels
Programming
Affiliations Almavision
Ownership
OwnerAlmavision
History
Founded1979;44 years ago (1979)
Former call signs
W56AZ (1979-2003)
WEYS-LP (2003-2021)
Former channel number(s)
Analog:
56 (UHF, 1979-2009)
6 (VHF, 2009-2021)
Virtual:
54 (2021)
PBS (via WPBT-TV, 1979-2001)
Network One (via WEYS-TV, 2001-2005)
Call sign meaning
The Florida Keys
Technical information
Facility ID 6035
Class Translator
ERP 3 kW
Links
Website www.almavision.com
Radio station information
Frequency 87.7 MHz
BrandingAlmavision Radio 87.7 FM
Programming
Format Spanish language religious
Links
Website almavision.tv

WEYS-LD, VHF digital channel 6 (virtual channel 31), is a low-powered Almavision-owned-and-operated television station licensed to Miami, Florida, United States.

Contents

History

As W56AZ

Founded in 1979 by the board of county commissioners, it was a relay translator for PBS affiliate WPBT-TV. The station went temporarily dark in 1989 for repairs and upgrades. It returned soon thereafter, though the format remained the same until the county commissioners sold the station in 2001 to WEYS Television Corp, then an affiliate of Network One.

As WEYS-LP

By 2003, the call sign was changed to WEYS-LP. It was later sold to Cayo Hueso Networks, LLC. The station continued as a relay translator until it was sold once more to Almavision Hispanic Network, Inc. in 2005. With the relay translator station of WSBS-TV discontinued, it ran religious programming full-time, replacing Network One. As a low-power station, it remained as an analog station after the transition. Its audio also could be picked up at 87.7 FM due to an overlap between channel 6 and the start of the FM band. This kind of station is colloquially known as a "Franken-FM."

As WEYS-LD

The station was licensed for digital operation on July 12, 2021, changing its call sign to WEYS-LD. The station's radio programs moved to WNMA in January 2022. On July 20, 2023, an FCC "Report and Order" included this station as one of 13 "FM6" stations allowed to continue to operate an FM radio broadcast, as a "ancillary or supplementary" service. [1]

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