WVWR-FM The station signed on the air on August 1, 1973, as WVWR-FM (Virginia Western Radio) licensed to
Virginia Western Community College in Roanoke. It was used primarily to air college telecourses and give broadcasting students a chance to hone their skills. In 1975, WVWR-FM's transmitter was moved from Fishburn Hall on the VWCC campus to
Poor Mountain, where most of Roanoke's major radio and television stations have their transmitters. The power also was increased from 4,100 watts to 100,000 watts. The power boost tripled its coverage area, giving it at least secondary coverage in much of central and southwest Virginia, southern
West Virginia and northern
North Carolina. In 1979, WVWR-FM began the Radio Reading Service on its subcarrier frequency.
Virginia Tech Foundation In 1981, state officials decided that no state agency should directly own a radio station, and Virginia Western was forced to sell. The Virginia Tech Foundation, financially independent of Virginia Tech but controlled by school leadership, expressed interest in buying the station. It not only wanted to preserve public radio in the region, but saw WVWR as a way to increase Virginia Tech's ties to Roanoke. The foundation formally took control in 1982 and initially applied for the
call sign WRVT before settling on WVTF. Over the next decade, WVTF built translator after translator to better serve its mostly mountainous coverage area. From 1980 to 2017, WVTF and its repeaters maintained a schedule typical of full-service public radio stations, with NPR news in drive times,
classical music during the day and overnight, and various special music and talk programming on nights and weekends.
Rebranding as Radio IQ In 2003, WVTF launched
Radio IQ in order to provide a secondary schedule consisting only of news/talk programming, including retransmission of the
BBC World Service overnight. Radio IQ signed on WRIQ in
Lexington in 2011 and purchased WQIQ near
Fredericksburg in 2013. On July 10, 2017, Radio IQ became WVTF's main service, and the station itself rebranded from "WVTF Public Radio" to "Radio IQ". Three of the five existing Radio IQ stations (WVTW, WQIQ, and WRIQ) merged with WVTF and its network (WVTR, WVTU, and WISE-FM) to place the news and talk schedule on as many full-powered signals as possible. A new companion service,
WVTF Music, launched on the remaining stations (WWVT and WFFC, later renamed
WWVT-FM) and
HD2 subchannels of the new combined Radio IQ network. Low-powered translators of the previous WVTF and Radio IQ networks were divided between the two services. WVTF Music took over all music programming, including daily blocks of classical music, specialty local programs, and
Live From Here.
WRIQ Richmond Radio IQ's programming had been heard in portions of the
Greater Richmond Region on low-powered translator W223AZ (92.5 FM) since 2009. In October 2019, WVTF purchased
WNVU (89.7 FM) in nearby Charles City, Virginia. That station began simulcasting Radio IQ programming in January 2020 under the new call letters WRIQ. WRIQ brings a full-powered Radio IQ signal to Richmond for the first time. That puts it in direct competition with Richmond-based NPR member
WCVE-FM. WCVE has its own network of rebroadcasters known as the VPM News Service. ==Stations==