WFMJ-FM The 105.1 spot on the dial was originally WFMJ-FM and was
licensed to Youngstown. The
call letters spelled out the initials of its founder, William F. Maag, Jr. He was also publisher of
The Youngstown Vindicator, and owned
WFMJ (1390 AM). Maag also put
WFMJ-TV channel 21 on the air in 1953. WFMJ-FM was issued a
construction permit in 1947, but the station did not go on the air until January 1950. Few people owned FM radios in those days and there was little prospect of the station becoming profitable. Only a few years later, WFMJ Broadcasting Company requested that the
Federal Communications Commission (FCC) cancel the WFMJ-FM license, which occurred on January 5, 1954.
WSOM-FM WSOM-FM, a new station in Salem,
signed on the air on November 25, 1958. WSOM-FM was owned by Salem Broadcasting Company, which added an AM station in 1965, 600 WSOM (today
WRQX). At first, the two stations
simulcast. But by the late 1970s, the FM station had switched to a
country music format. Rust Communications Group purchased WSOM-AM-FM on December 13, 1979. This was the first of many ownership changes that occurred over the next several years.
WQXK To give it a separate identity, WSOM-FM's call sign was changed to WQXK in January 1980.
Cumulus Media acquired WQXK and WSOM in 2000. WQXK has been nominated numerous times for
CMA Small Market Radio Station of the Year. WQXK took home the prestigious award in November 2004. K105 is also a participant in the "Country Cares for Kids
St. Jude Radiothon." The station has raised over $3,000,000 since the partnership began in the early 1990s.
Grandfathered power The station broadcasts 88,000 watts, which exceeds the FCC's current maximum power output of 50,000 watts. It is
grandfathered at the higher power by virtue of its being in operation before the limit was introduced. The transmitter is located between Salem and
Leetonia on State Route 344, just outside the Salem city limits. The most powerful station in the region, it covers not only Youngstown but also can be picked up in
Akron,
Canton,
Cleveland,
Erie,
Pittsburgh, and
Wheeling/
Steubenville markets. In part, due to the station's strong signal, WQXK is the highest-rated station in the Youngstown
radio market, often attracting out-of-market listeners. K105's signal can be picked up clearly in over 20 counties in 3 states (Ohio, Pennsylvania, and West Virginia). It has occasionally reached the suburbs of
Columbus, Ohio, under the right weather conditions. Though, in Pittsburgh, it gets knocked out by translator W286CZ , licensed to
Greensburg, Pennsylvania , also on 105.1. ==References==