WNOK (104.7 FM broadcasting) is a Commercial radio radio station licensed to Columbia, South Carolina, serving the Columbia metropolitan area and the Midlands of South Carolina. It broadcasts a top 40 (CHR) radio format and it's owned by iHeartMedia, Inc. The current slogan is "The Midlands' #1 Hit Music Station." Its are on Greystone Boulevard in Columbia, off Interstate 126, near the Riverbanks Zoo. WNOK.com/contact
WNOK has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 90,000 . The transmitter is in the northeast section of Columbia, off Hardscrabble Road at Lee Road. Radio-Locator.com/WNOK WNOK is "short-spaced" with WKQC in Charlotte, also broadcasting on 104.7 MHz. The two stations are only about 90 miles apart with WKQC running an ERP of 96,000 watts. FCC rules would normally require two co-channel Class C-1 FM stations to be 152 miles apart. Both stations use directional antennas to limit co-channel interference. The Chester and Lancaster areas of South Carolina have trouble receiving a clear signal from either station.
In the late 1960s, WNOK and WNOK-FM ended simulcasting. 1230 WNOK went with a Top 40 sound, while 104.7 WNOK-FM flipped to a Beautiful Music format. It was mostly automated, playing quarter hour sweeps of instrumental of popular songs, Broadway theatre and Hollywood show tunes. In addition, WNOK-FM offered commercial-free instrumental background music on a subsidiary communications authority (SCA) subcarrier channel with a frequency of 23 kHz. This prevented the station from broadcasting in FM stereo because the SCA subchannel occupied part of the frequency band. In November 1963, WNOK-FM interrupted its background music service to announce that President John Kennedy had been shot in Dallas, Texas. The announcement was heard in department stores, restaurants and offices throughout the Columbia area.
By 1980, the automation was done away with, replaced with live , and the station's name was rounded up to "105 WNOK". By early 1984, as digital tuners became more common, the station became "104.7 WNOK." It was the first FM station in Columbia to use its actual frequency, down to the decimal place, as part of its name.
The company also owns Sports radio 1400 WCOS, Country music 97.5 WCOS-FM, Adult Hits 96.7 WLTY, Urban contemporary 100.1 WXBT and Talk radio 560 WVOC in the Columbia media market.
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