KLSU explained

KLSU
City:Baton Rouge, Louisiana
Area:Baton Rouge metropolitan area
Frequency:91.1 MHz
Founded: (as WLSU, a carrier current station)
Airdate: (as 107.3 WPRG)
Format:Free-Form College Radio - Adult Album Alternative
Erp:23,000 watts
Haat:49 meters (161 ft)
Class:C3
Facility Id:38604
Coordinates:30.4103°N -91.1769°W
Callsign Meaning:K–Louisiana State University
Former Callsigns:WPRG (1979–1982)
Owner:Louisiana State University
Website:KLSUradio.fm

KLSU (91.1 FM) is the student-run college radio station owned by Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. It has a free-form radio format, playing adult album alternative music with other genres and specialty programming. It is part of the university's Student Media Program with students serving as DJs and management staff. The studios and offices are in the basement of Hodges Hall.[1] It is licensed under the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) as a non-commercial educational (NCE) radio station.

KLSU is a Class C3 station. It has an effective radiated power of 23,000 watts of power, reaching up to 40miles beyond the LSU campus. The transmitter tower is atop Choppin Hall, off Tower Road, on the LSU campus in Baton Rouge.Radio-Locator.com/KLSU

History

WLSU and WPRG

The station began on . But it was not on FM. It was a carrier current AM station, only heard in the dorms and buildings on campus. It was not regulated by the FCC. To sound like a real radio station, it used the call sign WLSU, with the initials standing for the university's name.

The university wanted an FM radio station to be heard not just on campus but around the Baton Rouge area. The FCC gave it a construction permit to build an FM station in the late 1970s. The FM station officially signed on the air on .[2] Its call sign was WPRG and it broadcast at 107.3 MHz. The power was only eight watts. It usually broadcast from 7 a.m. to 2 a.m. with mostly rock shows. It played classical music on Sunday mornings and Jazz was heard on Saturday and Sunday nights.[3]

Almost immediately, the station petitioned the FCC to allow it to move its frequency to 91.1 MHz and boost its power. A few years later, it was permitted to relocate to the non-commercial frequency and increase its power to 5,700 watts.

KLSU

The station was given randomly assigned call letters as WPRG. It could not be called WLSU because that is the call sign of the college station at the University of Wisconsin–La Crosse. So station management tried a different approach to get the university's initials in its call letters.

KLSU is unusual in that its call sign begins with a K but is located on the east side on the Mississippi River. Most stations on that side of the Mississippi have call letters beginning with a W. Because KLSU would be located within a mile of the Mississippi River, in 1982 the FCC granted an exemption to the K–W rule so it could have LSU in its call sign.

For most of its history, KLSU was a low-power Class A station. In April 2016, KLSU significantly upgraded its power to 23,000 watts.[4] It is now classified a Class C3 station.

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. https://www.lsureveille.com/klsu/about/ lsureveille.com/klsu/about
  2. https://www.worldradiohistory.com/Archive-BC-YB/1983/B-Radio-1983-YB.pdf Broadcasting & Cable Yearbook 1983 page B-102. Retrieved Sept. 23, 2024.
  3. https://liblegacy.lsu.edu/sites/all/files/oralhistory/presentations/KLSU/C64.php "History of KLSU" Advocate newspaper, Jan. 6, 1980. Retrieved Sept. 24, 2024.
  4. Web site: Application Search Details.