A Short History of
Television Station W9XK/W9XUI
By Rick Plummer, broadcast historian
The electrical engineering department at the
State University of Iowa (SUI) in Iowa City demonstrated television at an
exhibit at the Iowa State Fair in Des Moines on August 28, 1931.
J. L. Potter supervised the project. At the conclusion of the
fair, the television experiment is set up in the communications
laboratory in the electrical engineering building at SUI in Iowa City.
On September 10, 1931, a suggested finding
of fact is submitted to the Federal Radio Commission for a
construction permit for an experimental visual broadcasting
station. Several months later, on November 17th, FRC examiner
Elmer W. Pratts recommended that a construction permit be issued to
SUI. On January 8th, 1932, a construction permit is issued for
the experimental station. Construction of the station commenced
on January 23rd, 1932 and was completed on April 7th, 1932. A
license was granted and the call W9XK was assigned by the Secretary
of Commerce to SUI on May 27th, 1932.
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Mechanical Scanning Transmitter Specs:
Power granted: 100 watts
Frequency: 2000-2100 KHz,
Carrier frequency 2050 KHz
Wavelength: 146 meters
Emission: A3, special
Antenna height: 23 meters
Frequency tolerance: 0.03%
Visual studios and transmitter are located
on the ground floor of the electrical engineering building located at
the corner of Iowa Avenue and Dubuque Street in Iowa City
Scanning Disc Specs:
45 holes on 3 spirals. A 15-rpm
driving motor spun the disc. The image was scanned 15 times per
second. A 1000-watt projection lamp and 3 condensing and
focusing lens were used as well as 10 banks of photoelectric cells
connected in parallel.
Camera and transmitter |
On January 25th, 1933, a combined broadcast
from W9XK and WSUI was held at 7:15 pm from room 102 in the
electrical engineering building. A brief lecture on the
university was presented which included a violin solo by Irene
Ruppert, a lesson in freehand sketching by Aden Arnold, and a
dramatic scene from the play "The First Mrs. Fraser",
portrayed by Mrs. Arnold Gillette and Miss Helene Blattner.
On March 4th, 1933, a 15-minute closed
circuit demonstration of the television facility consisting of news
flashes from the Daily Iowan was broadcast by editor Frank Jaffe and
announced by Carl Menzer, director of WSUI. More than 1000 persons
witnessed the demonstration. Here are letters from W9XK to an experimenter.
W9XUI
A construction permit was granted to SUI for
a high-frequency electronic scanning station operating on 42-56 MHz
and 60 to 86 MHz (5 meter band) with an output of 100 watts.
The Call sign W9XUI was granted to the new station on September 29th,
1936. This transmitter used an electronic scan 441-line 30
frames per second system developed by RCA. In the fall of 1938,
an electronic camera and monitor were in operation, but the
electronic system but was not being transmitted over the air.
On June 29, 1939, the last program was
broadcast over W9XK and WSUI.
On May 15th, 1941, W9XUI transmitted a
closed circuit signal of "A Cup of Coffee" to an electronic
receiver in an adjacent room. Twelve technicians and 9 players
were necessary to produce the play. World War II stopped all
television experiments at the university and these experiments were
never resumed after the conclusion of the war. Today, two
television stations are licensed to Iowa City: KIIN-12, a satellite
station of the Iowa Public Broadcasting Network whose transmitter is
located near West Branch, and KWKB-20, a Warner Brothers affiliate
whose studio, transmitter, and tower are located just across the road
from KIIN.



(Pictures courtesy of Rick Plummer)
Another history of W9XK
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