City | Edmonton, Alberta |
---|---|
Broadcast area | Edmonton Capital Region |
Branding | TSN 1260 |
Slogan | The Evolution of Sports Radio |
Frequency | 1260 kHz (AM) |
First air date | April 17, 1927 as CHMA |
Format | Sports |
Power | 50,000 watts |
Class | A (Regional) |
Transmitter coordinates | 53°27′8.3″N 113°40′52.6″W / 53.452306°N 113.681278°WCoordinates: 53°32′30.5″N 113°38′29″W / 53.541806°N 113.64139°W |
Callsign meaning | Rice and Nielsen |
Affiliations | TSN Radio |
Owner |
Bell Media (Bell Media Radio) |
Sister stations | CFBR-FM, CFMG-FM, CFRN-DT |
Website | http://www.TSN1260.ca |
CFRN is a Canadian Class A, 50,000 watt (directional at night) radio station in Edmonton, Alberta; CFRN is unusual in that it is a Class A (protected nighttime skywave) AM station on a regional frequency. Owned by Bell Media and broadcasting on 1260 AM, the station airs an all-sports format, branded as TSN Radio 1260. The station's studios are located at 18520 Stony Plain Road in Edmonton, where it shares studio space with its sister station, CTV O&O CFRN-TV. Both stations continued to share space after the radio and TV operations were sold to different owners in the 1980s, but were united in 2013 by Bell's acquisition of Astral Media.
CKHJ in Fredericton, New Brunswick, is the only other commercial radio station in Canada which broadcasts on 1260 AM; it broadcasts 10,000 watts day and night, with a directional (three-tower) antenna. The other two Canadian stations on 1260 AM (CBPM & CBPU) are weather stations, which are owned by The Meteorological Service of Canada. Both of those weather stations broadcast with a power of 30 watts.
In 1927, the station originally launched as CHMA at 580 AM. In the 1930s, CHMA became CFTP.
During the 1930s, the station changed its calls from CFTP to its current call sign, CFRN. Later that decade, the station moved to its current frequency, 1260 AM.
In 1936, the station moved from 1260 to 960 AM. In 1941, CFRN moved back to 1260 AM.
On July 1, 1998, CFRN flipped from adult standards to oldies, debuting Standard Radio's new oldies network, with CISL in Vancouver, delivered via Anik satellite. The new oldies network replaced the former Satellite Radio Network service.