NHK Radio 1

NHK Radio 1 (NHKラジオ第1放送, NHK Rajio Dai-ichi Hōsō) is Japan's oldest radio station operated by the public broadcaster, NHK. Its programming output, which consists of news, current affairs, and information is broadly similar to the BBC's Radio 4 in the United Kingdom, Radio National in Australia, CBC Radio One in Canada and Radyo 1 in Turkey .[1] NHK Radio 1 is available mainly on AM. The callsign is JOAK in Tokyo. It began broadcasting on March 22, 1925. During World War II, it often broadcast official announcements.[2]

NHK Radio 1
Broadcast areaJapan
FrequenciesMW: 540 kHz, 549 kHz, 567 kHz, 594 kHz, 612 kHz, 639 kHz, 666 kHz, 684 kHz, 729 kHz, 891 kHz, 963 kHz, 1071 kHz, 1323 kHz, 1503 kHz
Programming
Language(s)Japanese, English
FormatNews, talk, sport and drama
Ownership
OwnerNHK
NHK Radio 2
NHK FM Broadcast
History
First air date
22 March 1925 (1925-03-22)
Call sign meaning
NHK Radio 1
Technical information
Power500kW
Links
WebcastNHK Net Radio(only in Japan)
WebsiteNHK.or.jp/r1/

Frequencies and other means of reception

RegionCityCall signFrequencyPower
HokkaidoSapporoJOIK567 kHz100 kW
HakodateJOVK675 kHz5 kW
AsahikawaJOCG621 kHz3 kW
ObihiroJOOG603 kHz5 kW
KushiroJOPG585 kHz10 kW
KitamiJOKP1188 kHz10 kW
MuroranJOIQ945 kHz3 kW
TōhokuSendaiJOHK891 kHz20 kW
AkitaJOUK1503 kHz10 kW
YamagataJOJG540 kHz5 kW
MoriokaJOQG531 kHz10 kW
FukushimaJOFP1323 kHz1 kW
AomoriJOTG963 kHz5 kW
Kantō-Kōshin'etsuTokyoJOAK594 kHz300 kW
NaganoJONK819 kHz5 kW
NiigataJOQK837 kHz10 kW
KōfuJOKG927 kHz5 kW
Tōkai-HokurikuNagoyaJOCK729 kHz50 kW
KanazawaJOJK1224 kHz10 kW
ShizuokaJOPK882 kHz10 kW
FukuiJOFG927 kHz5 kW
ToyamaJOIG648 kHz5 kW
KansaiOsakaJOBK666 kHz100 kW
ŌtsuJOQP945 kHz1 kW
ChugokuHiroshimaJOFK1071 kHz20 kW
OkayamaJOKK603 kHz5 kW
MatsueJOTK1296 kHz10 kW
TottoriJOLG1368 kHz1 kW
YamaguchiJOUG675 kHz5 kW
ShikokuMatsuyamaJOZK963 kHz5 kW
KōchiJORK990 kHz10 kW
TokushimaJOXK945 kHz5 kW
TakamatsuJOHP1368 kHz5 kW
Kyushu-OkinawaFukuokaJOLK612 kHz100 kW
KitakyushuJOSK540 kHz1 kW
KumamotoJOGK756 kHz10 kW
NagasakiJOAG684 kHz5 kW
KagoshimaJOHG576 kHz10 kW
MiyazakiJOMG540 kHz5 kW
ŌitaJOIP639 kHz5 kW
SagaJOSP963 kHz1 kW
NahaJOAP549 kHz10 kW

See also

References

  1. "Regular Radio Broadcasting Begins". Archived from the original on 8 June 2002. Retrieved 27 July 2015.
  2. Chun, Jayson Makoto (6 December 2006). A Nation of a Hundred Million Idiots?: A Social History of Japanese Television, 1953 - 1973. Routledge. ISBN 9781135869762. Retrieved 13 February 2017.


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