XHOF-FM

Radio station in Mexico City
19°16′11.0″N 99°13′59.6″W / 19.269722°N 99.233222°W / 19.269722; -99.233222LinksWebcastXHOF-FMWebsitehttp://www.imer.mx/reactor/

XHOF-FM, also known as Reactor 105.7, is a radio station in Mexico City that plays alternative rock music, and hip hop mainly in English and Spanish. Its broadcast frequency is 105.7 MHz.

XHOF-FM used to broadcast in HD.[4], but the digital signal became silent in early 2020 due to operating costs.[5][6]

History

Radio Departamento

Under the Departamento del Distrito Federal, XHOF-FM broadcast from this building on the Zócalo

The Department of the Federal District (DDF) solicited a permit for a radio station in 1967.[7][3] However, the station seemed cursed from the beginning. The Department had a hard time procuring the permit; one month after it was issued, the government was still evaluating the technical parameters. Additionally, the original callsign of XEDO-FM had to be changed (in April 1968) when it was discovered that a Michoacán radio station had been using that unique identifier since 1961.

In March 1969, the SCT informed the DDF that the latter still had not complied with the requirements for the construction of the station. "Radio Departamento", however, soon got on track to launch May 1, 1969, from the top floor of the Departamento del Distrito Federal building, with 161 square metres (1,730 sq ft) of floor space to work with.[3]

To IMER

In 1983, the Instituto Mexicano de la Radio was created. IMER included all of the stations operated by the executive branch of the federal government, XHOF included. However, it took the SCT until 2005 to transfer the permit of XHOF to IMER, on the fourth request by the latter. From 1992 to 1994, XHOF was operated by Radio S.A. (RASA) under contract.[3] Meanwhile, the station went through various names and formats: Radio Cosmos, Estéreo Joven, Láser FM, Conexión Acústica and Órbita 105.7. In 2005, the Legislative Assembly of the Federal District asked then-mayor Andrés Manuel López Obrador to take action to "recover" control of the station from IMER, but López Obrador, like his predecessors, did not take any action.[3]

The current Reactor format was formed after the closure of Radioactivo 98.5 and the old Órbita 105.7 format. Some of the most popular and relevant radio hosts of the former stations are now working for Reactor. Because of the official nature of the radio station there is a strong tendency to promote Spanish-speaking or Mexican bands, a situation that has defined the personality of the project as the only opportunity for the independent market of alternative or out-of-the-mainstream bands in Mexico.

In 2019, the SPR's XHSPRM-FM 103.5 in Mazatlán flipped from simulcasting Radio México Internacional to simulcasting Reactor.

References

  1. ^ a b c d Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio FM. Last modified 2018-05-16. Retrieved 2014-07-01. Technical information from the IFT Coverage Viewer.
  2. ^ Instituto Federal de Telecomunicaciones. Infraestructura de Estaciones de Radio AM. Last modified 2018-05-16. Retrieved 2014-07-01. Technical information from the IFT Coverage Viewer.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Laura Islas Reyes, "La estación maldita", Etcétera 1 March 2007
  4. ^ http://hdradio.com/mexico/estaciones HD Radio Guide for Mexico
  5. ^ https://www.infobae.com/america/mexico/2019/06/26/crisis-en-la-radio-publica-mexicana-estaciones-sin-locutores-y-renuncias-bajo-protesta-sacuden-al-imer/
  6. ^ https://plumasatomicas.com/cultura/cultura-cultura/cortes-presupuestales-del-imer-cancelan-4-emisoras-que-esta-pasando-en-la-radio-publica/
  7. ^ XHOF-FM permit

External links

  • (in Spanish) XHOF-FM — official page
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Stations in Mexico City
Elsewhere in MexicoDefunct/former IMER stations
See Category:Instituto Mexicano de la Radio
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Radio stations in Mexico City
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Puebla City
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Hidalgo
State of Mexico
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See also
List of radio stations in Mexico City

Notes
1. Station is silent
2. Unbuilt or under construction