WSB-TV tower explained

The WSB-TV tower is a 327.6adj=onNaNadj=on guyed mast broadcast tower in the Old Fourth Ward neighborhood of Atlanta, Georgia, immediately adjacent to Freedom Parkway and the Historic Fourth Ward Park skate park. The tower was built in 1950, and at its completion was the tallest guyed mast tower in the United States. It has a triangular cross section.

This tower is so close to Freedom Parkway that one of its three sets of guy wires goes over the road, which was built under the tower system in the 1990s. To protect against falling ice during and after freezing rain in winter, the roadway is covered with a sturdy bridge-like structure at this point.[1]

Stations

The FCC lists the following FM[2] and television[3] stations at this location:

During the 2000s, the WSB-TV tower carried both the analog TV signal on VHF channel 2 (54 to 60 MHz) and the current digital TV signal on UHF (620 to 626 MHz). Following the DTV transition in the United States, which forced analog TV stations off-air in June 2009, the old antenna (larger due to the longer wavelength of lower carrier frequencies) was removed from the top, and the smaller UHF antenna moved in its place, improving its broadcast range slightly, due to the increase in height.

See also

External links

33.7644°N -84.3617°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: "City Café", Public Broadcasting Atlanta (PBA), 2009. pba.org. March 31, 2019.
  2. http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/fmq?type=0&list=1&dist=.1&dlat2=33&mlat2=45&slat2=51&dlon2=84&mlon2=21&slon2=42&size=10 FM
  3. http://www.fcc.gov/fcc-bin/tvq?type=0&list=1&dist=.1&dlat2=33&mlat2=45&slat2=51&dlon2=84&mlon2=21&slon2=42&size=10 TV