South Korea radio station
MBC FM4U is a K-pop , Pop music , Classical music and Entertainment station from Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation . Launched in September 19, 1971 it was South Korea's second FM station, with TBC Radio (Now KBS Cool FM ) being first and KBS Stereo FM (now KBS Classic FM ) being third.
Availability
Seoul, Incheon, Gyeonggi Province
Callsign
Frequency
Power (kW)
Transmitter Location
HLKV-FM
FM 91.9MHz
10kW
Gwanaksan
Other Provinces
Chuncheon MBC FM4U : FM 94.5, 98.3 MHz
Wonju MBC FM4U : FM 98.9 MHz
MBC Gangwon Yeongdong (Gangneung) FM4U : FM 94.3, 90.7, 96.9 MHz
MBC Gangwon Yeongdong (Samcheok) FM4U : FM 98.1, 99.9 MHz
Daejeon MBC FM4U : FM 97.5 MHz
MBC Chungbuk FM4U (Cheongju) : FM 99.7 MHz
MBC Chungbuk FM4U (Chungju) : FM 88.7 MHz
Jeonju MBC FM4U : FM 99.1 MHz
Gwangju MBC FM4U : FM 91.5, 95.1 MHz
Mokpo MBC FM4U : FM 102.3 MHz
Yeosu MBC FM4U : FM 98.3 MHz
Daegu MBC FM4U : FM 95.3 MHz
Andong MBC FM4U : FM 91.3 MHz
Pohang MBC FM4U : FM 97.9, 94.9, 90.9 MHz
Busan MBC FM4U : FM 88.9 MHz
Ulsan MBC FM4U : FM 98.7 MHz
MBC Gyeongnam FM4U (Jinju) : FM 97.7, 96.1 MHz
MBC Gyeongnam FM4U (Changwon) : FM 100.5 MHz
Jeju MBC FM4U : FM 90.1, 102.9, 102.5 MHz
History
September 19, 1971 - MBC FM Launched. (call sign HLKV-FM, FM frequency 91.9 MHz, Power 1 kW)
1983 - MBC-FM boosted power. (1 kW → 10 kW)
1986 - MBC-FM Started Nationwide Broadcast.
1988 - Partial 24 hours broadcasting started. (Monday to Saturday 24 hours, Sunday 21 hours)
1995 - MBC FM Started 24 hours Broadcasting.
2001 - Renamed as MBC FM4U.
2002 - Digital tapeless system conversion completed.
August 3, 2014 - MBC FM4U broadcasting in Yeouido Island MBC ended. (The building will be torn down soon.)
August 4, 2014 - MBC FM4U broadcasting in Sang-am dong MBC started.
Programmes and schedules
See also
References
전국 주파수 안내 | 라디오 | iMBC.com . www.imbc.com (in Korean). Retrieved 2018-07-13.
External links
Munhwa Broadcasting Corporation (MBC)Key people Current
Park Sung-jae (president and CEO)
Former
Kim Ji-tae (founder)
Go Won-jeong
Hwang Yong-joo
Jo Jung-chul
Lee Hwan-eui
Lee Jin-hee
Lee Woong-hee
Hwang Sun-pil
Kim Young-soo
Choi Chang-bong
Kang Seong-gu
Lee Deuk-yeol
Noh Seung-dae
Kim Joong-bae
Lee Geung-hee
Choi Moon-soon
Ohm Ki-young
Kim Jae-chul
Kim Jong-guk
Ahn Gwang-han
Kim Jang-gyeom
Choi Seung-ho
Regional units
Television networks Radio networks
Subsidiaries and divisions
Related articles
See also
Defunct services
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