CBOF-FM

CBOF-FM (90.7 MHz) is a non-commercial Canadian radio station located in Ottawa, Ontario. It airs a French language news-talk radio format, much of which comes from the Ici Radio-Canada Première network. The studios and offices are located at the CBC Ottawa Broadcast Centre on Sparks Street in Downtown Ottawa.

CBOF-FM
CityOttawa, Ontario
Broadcast areaNational Capital Region
Eastern Ontario
Outaouais
BrandingIci Radio-Canada Première
Frequency90.7 MHz (FM)
First air dateAugust 1, 1964 (AM)
January 7, 1991 (FM)
FormatNews/Talk
ERP84,000 watts
HAAT323 meters (1,060 ft)
ClassC1
Call sign meaningCanadian Broadcasting Corporation Ottawa French
Former frequencies1250 kHz (AM) (1964-1991)
OwnerCanadian Broadcasting Corporation
WebsiteIci Radio-Canada Première

Owned and operated by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (French: Société Radio-Canada), CBOF-FM has an effective radiated power (ERP) of 84,000 watts as a class C1 station, using an omnidirectional antenna located off Chemin Dunlop in Camp Fortune, Quebec.[1]

Programming

The station's current local programs are Les matins d'ici, heard weekday mornings from 5:30 a.m. to 9 a.m., and Sur le vif airing on weekday afternoons, 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. The early morning program from 5 a.m. to 5:30 a.m., Info matin, originates from CBF-FM Montreal and is also heard in Quebec City. CBOF-FM's Saturday morning local program is Les malins, heard from 7:00 a.m. to 11 a.m.

History

The station signed on in 1964 as CBOF. It was originally on the AM band at 1250 kHz, with 10,000 watts day and night. Before then, Radio-Canada relied on privately owned AM 970 CKCH in nearby Hull, Quebec, as well as the 50,000-watt signal of Montreal's AM 690 CBF, to serve Ottawa's francophones.

On January 15, 1975 the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) approved the CBC's application to increase CBOF's signal from 10,000 watts to 50,000 watts day and night at 1250 kHz.[2] In the 1980s, the CBC made the decision to begin moving many of its English and French-language AM stations to the FM dial.

The CRTC approved the CBC's application to convert CBOF from the AM band to the FM band, on November 9, 1989. [3] CBOF moved to its current frequency on 90.7 MHz on January 7, 1991 as CBOF-FM. After a period of simulcasting on both AM and FM, the AM transmitter was shutdown. Its sister station on 102.5, on the Radio-Canada Musique network, which used the CBOF-FM call sign before that date, is now known as CBOX-FM.

CBOF-FM, like all Première network stations but unlike most FM stations, broadcasts in mono. While still on the AM dial, CBOF experimented with AM stereo broadcasts between 1984 and 1987, testing all four AM stereo systems (C-QUAM, Kahn-Hazeltine, Harris and Magnavox) proposed at the time.


Transmitters

Rebroadcasters of CBOF-FM
City of licenseIdentifierFrequencyRECNetCRTC Decision
Maniwaki, QuebecCBOF-1990 AMQuery
RolphtonCBOF-41400 AMQuery
CornwallCBOF-FM-698.1 FMQuery
BrockvilleCBOF-FM-7102.1 FMQuery
Pembroke/Chapeau, QuebecCBOF-FM-988.7 FMQuery
  • The two AM repeaters in Rolphton, Ontario and Maniwaki, Quebec are the last two remaining CBOF repeaters that currently operate on the AM band. There's a possibility that these repeaters either may be shut down or relocate to the FM band in the future.

Former repeaters

Former CBOF repeaters that have been silent since the 1980s and 1990s:

  • Petawawa - CBOF-2 1240 AM
  • Deep River - CBOF-3 730 AM
  • Mattawa - CBOF-5 1090 AM - This was a former repeater of CBOF Ottawa [4] which still remains on the air (in 2018 at 1090 kHz) as CBON-12, a repeater of CBON-FM Sudbury
  • Renfrew - CBOF-FM-8 98.7 - This was a former FM repeater in Renfrew, Ontario that was deleted when CBOF-FM signed on in Ottawa in the early 1990s. The 98.7 FM frequency is now currently occupied by CJHR-FM in Renfrew, while the two former AM frequencies that were used by CBOF as repeaters in Petawawa and Deep River were never reactivated for any other future broadcasting.

References

  1. FCCdata.org/CBOF-FM
  2. Decision CRTC 75-17 The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, · Page 17, January 22, 1975 newspapers.com
  3. Decision CRTC 89-835
  4. The Ottawa Journal from Ottawa, · Page 2. September 23, 1977

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