KOAS

KOAS
City Dolan Springs, Arizona
Broadcast area Laughlin area
Las Vegas Valley
Branding Old School 105.7
Slogan The Valley's Old School Station!
Frequency 105.7 MHz
Repeater(s) 105.7 KOAS-FM1 (Henderson, NV)
First air date August 1, 1984 (as KCRR)
Format Rhythmic Oldies
Audience share 4.0, #7 (Fa'07, R&R[1])
ERP 100,000 watts
HAAT 1,781 feet (542.8 m)
Class C
Facility ID 25692
Transmitter coordinates 35°50′11.00″N 114°19′8.00″W / 35.8363889°N 114.3188889°W / 35.8363889; -114.3188889
Callsign meaning K OASis (former branding)
Former callsigns KCRR (1984-1987)
KFLG (1987-2000)
KBYE (2000-2001)
Owner Beasley Broadcast Group, Inc.
(Beasley Media Group, LLC)
Webcast Listen Live
Website oldschool1057.com

KOAS (105.7 FM, Old School 105.7) is a radio station broadcasting a Rhythmic Oldies format. Licensed to Dolan Springs, Arizona, USA, the station serves the Laughlin/Las Vegas/Dolan Springs area. The station is currently owned by Beasley Broadcast Group, Inc. through licensee Beasley Media Group, LLC. The station's studios are located in the unincorporated Clark County area of Spring Valley, while its transmitter is in Dolan Springs.

Translators

Radio stations KOAS(FM)105.7 and KVGS(FM)107.9 have on-channel FM boosters broadcasting from an antenna at the top of The Stratosphere. Licensed as KOAS-FM1 and KVGS-FM1, they are the only radio stations with transmitters at the tower. However, the signals being transmitted from this structure are relatively low-power and only cover the immediate Las Vegas area on a "fill in" or "booster" basis. Both of these stations have their main transmitter sites located elsewhere, and those transmitter sites are what give these stations more wide spread, regional coverage.[3][4]

History

The station was assigned the call sign KCRR on August 1, 1984. On November 20, 1987, the station changed its call sign to KFLG. On December 12, 2000 the station became KBYE and on August 14, 2001 the current KOAS.[6] On December 26, 2009, KOAS dropped New AC (NAC)/Smooth Jazz for Rhythmic AC, forcing KPLV to move to top 40 from rhythmic AC. On April 1, 2013, KOAS shifted their format to rhythmic oldies. In November 2013, the long time "Oasis" moniker (from the previous smooth jazz format) was dropped in favor of "Old School 105-7".

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.