This improvised coverage map, apparently hand-drawn to
show the signal pattern of Fremont's KFMR (104.9 FM), was included in
the station's sales package during the mid-1970s. KFMR began its life as
KHYD in March 1961 under the ownership of Leon Crosby,
who
later owned San Francisco's KMPX (107 FM) and KEMO-TV (Channel 20). KHYD
broadcast from studios on Peralta Boulevard and a transmitter in the
hills above Niles in Fremont, and became KFMR in August 1964. The
station became the first fulltime country music station on the FM dial —
in stereo — in the Bay Area in 1967. By the mid-197os, KFMR was
broadcasting brokered religious programming from studios on Williams
Street in Fremont's Centerville District.
The station switched to Spanish-language programming in
1979 as KDOS, and became KBRG in 1983, relocating its studios from
Fremont to San Jose in 1989. KBRG was switched to Classic Rock KUFX
("The Fox") in December 1997, and began simulcasting sister station KOME
(98.5) in June 1998 as KLDZ. On February 1, 1999, KLDZ became KCNL
(Channel 104.9).
The station's transmitter was moved from its original
location in the Fremont hills to a new site in the hills near San Jose,
and its city of license was legally changed to Sunnyvale in February
2003.
THE BAY AREA RADIO MUSEUM IS A CALIFORNIA 501(C)(3) NON-PROFIT
CORPORATION
DEDICATED TO PRESERVING AND HONORING THE HISTORY OF
RADIO BROADCASTING IN THE SAN FRANCISCO BAY AREA
IN AFFILIATION WITH THE
CALIFORNIA HISTORICAL RADIO SOCIETY