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  Logofile WINTelevisionsvg
  Logosize 170px
  Logoalt WIN Television Logo
  Launch March 18 , 1962
  Picture Format 576i ( SDTV ),<br /> 1080i ( HDTV )
  Owner WIN Corporation
  Slogan '' Still The One ''
  Web wintvcomau
  Broadcast Area Regional Queensland ,<br />Southern New South Wales ,<br /> Australian Capital Territory ,<br />Regional Victoria , Tasmania ,<br />Eastern South Australia ,<br />Regional Western Australia
  Terr Serv 1 Analogue
  Terr Chan 1 ''Tuned to various frequencies''
  Terr Serv 2 SD Digital
  Terr Chan 2 Channel 8
  Terr Serv 3 HD Digital
  Terr Chan 3 Channel 80
  Cable Serv 1 TransTV Digital
  Cable Chan 1 Channel 9
  Cable Serv 2 NC Digital
  Cable Chan 2 Channel 9
  Sat Serv 1 Optus C1
  Sat Chan 1 Transponder 6


WIN Television is an Australia n Television Network owned by the WIN Corporation that is based in Wollongong , Australia. WIN commenced transmissions on March 18 , 1962 as a single Wollongong -only station, and has since expanded to 24 Owned-and-operated Station s with transmissions covering a larger geographical area than any other Television Network , throughout Queensland , New South Wales , Victoria , the Australian Capital Territory , South Australia , Tasmania , and Western Australia .

The network's name, ''WIN'' is a reference to its original Wollongong station WIN-4, itself an acronym of Wollongong '''I'''llawarra '''N'''ew South Wales. Through its news division, WIN News , WIN Television broadcasts a half-hour news service to twenty regional markets.


HISTORY


The Beginning

Television Wollongong Transmission Limited (TWT), was incorporated on October 4 , 1955 by a group of local businessmen. Five years later, it was awarded a licence by the Postmaster-General's Department broadcast to the Illawarra and South Coast regions, over a number of other groups aligned to Sydney-based stations ATN-7 and TCN-9 . The new station was to broadcast on the VHF -4 frequency, using the callsign WIN (which stood for ''Wollongong (and the) Illawarra Network'' or alternatively ''Wollongong Illawarra New (South Wales)'', in line with other Australian Callsigns ). Soon after, a plot of land was purchased at Fort Drummond, approximately two kilometres south of the Wollongong Central Business District , for the station's Television Studio s.

Prior to the opening night's transmissions, WIN-4 undertook a television conversion program, aimed at encouraging residents to acquire new tuning equipment and converting television sets in the area to receive the station's allocated frequency. A transmitter was to be erected on Knight's Hill , however test transmissions were delayed due to rain.


1960s to the 1970s


In April 1963 , Media Securities, owned by Rupert Murdoch , acquired a controlling interest in the station and soon appointed a new general manager, Bill Lean. Both TCN-9 and ATN-7 began purchasing several hours of first-run American television programming from WIN-4, following contractual arrangements signed by Murdoch. Throughout this period WIN-4 expanded its repeater transmissions to include Moruya , Batemans Bay , Narooma , Bega and Eden . Local programming and the station's near-monopoly in the area meant that by 1973 , viewership had increased to occupy 63 percent of the audience.

Murdoch sold the station in 1979 to the head of Paramount Pictures ' international distribution arm, Bruce Gordon , in order to purchase controlling interests in capital city stations TEN-10 Sydney and ATV-0 Melbourne .


1980s to the 1990s

reporting WIN Television as the second network in regional Western Australia .]]

During this period, WIN expanded to include new stations in Victoria , Queensland , and New South Wales . In 1984 , WIN became the first regional television station to transmit in stereophonic sound.2 Close links between WIN Television and the Nine Network , ensured it the Nine Network affiliation for southern New South Wales when Aggregation took place in 1989 . The changes meant that WIN expanded into the rest of southern New South Wales, launching new stations in Canberra , Orange , Bathurst , Dubbo and Wagga , amongst others in 1989 , and at the same time acquiring new facilities in Orange, Wagga and Canberra. It also provided the network with two additional competitors, The Prime Network and Capital Television .

In 1990 WIN purchased Queensland station Star TV, shortly before regional Queensland was to be aggregated. The new station was set to become a Network Ten affiliate, however WIN's links with the Nine Network caused the Nine affiliation to move from QTV , which itself became affiliated to Ten.