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From the 'coverage area' section: "For many years, WWNY's largest viewership was in Kingston, since for nearly 20 years it was the only station routinely available over-the-air other than the local CKWS-TV."
Um, no. While CIII-TV 2 signed on (as CKGN) in January 1974 (vs. 1954/55 for CKWS and WWNY), it was the last of the VHF stations to go on the air in the Kingston-Watertown area. There were already three stations (NBC 3, CBS 5 WHEN, ABC 9 WSYR) in Syracuse (which came in poorly, receivable only with a full-size outdoor antenna) and three local stations ( CJOH-TV 6 CTV, WWNY 7, CKWS 11 CBC) in Kingston-Watertown. WPBS-TV (as WNPE) was likely the first UHF station in Kingston-Watertown (1971), followed several years later by an underpowered ABC repeater (of WUTR 20 Utica) on 50 (which has since become WWTI, a full-power local station). CBLFT 32 and CICA 38 are more recent additions (mid-1980's).
CJOH 6 was the last of the three CJOH VHF transmitters to go live (first was CJOH 13 Ottawa, then CJOH 8 Cornwall) but it does pre-date the 1974 addition of CKGN to this market by many years. Furthermore, once 2 Bancroft did go live, it was a hundred miles from Kingston-Watertown (Bancroft is an hour north of Belleville) and therefore no better a signal than the Syracuse, New York VHF locals. It might be worth checking when the third CJOH transmitter went on-air before designating WWNY and CKWS as the only game in town for nearly twenty years? They were first, but I'd suspect CJOH 6 has been around for longer than one may realise? -- carlb 21:28, 16 March 2006 (UTC)
CJOH-6 went on the air in 1972. So from 1954-72 (18 years...the nearly 20 as stated in the article) CKWS and WWNY were the only reliable over the air signals in Kingston.
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The lead has the transmitter located in Wilna, New York. The license is in Carthage, New York (Carthage is in Wilna, West Carthage is not) but the transmitter is on Champion Hill in Champion, New York. The claim of a digital subchannel for CBS on WNYF-CD 35 also looks suspect, as that transmitter is on the same tower as WWNY-DT 7 at low power (so anyone who can see 35 already has 7). The UHF 35 antenna was a leftover from the pointless simulcast US stations were required to provide during DTV transition (WWNY was 7 analogue/35 digital). K7L ( talk) 22:17, 6 October 2012 (UTC)