Wharite Peak
Wharite Peak is a mountain at the southern end of the Ruahine Range, 9 km (5.6 mi) north of Woodville in the Manawatū-Whanganui region of New Zealand. The mountain is home to the main television and FM radio transmitter for the city of Palmerston North and the wider Manawatu region.
| Wharite Peak | |
|---|---|
![]() View of Wharite from near Ashhurst, Manawatū | |
| Highest point | |
| Elevation | 920 m (3,020 ft) |
| Coordinates | 40°15′17″S 175°51′30″E |
| Geography | |
![]() Wharite Peak Manawatū-Whanganui, New Zealand | |
| Parent range | Ruahine Range |
Etymology
Wharite is a corruption of either Whare-Iti ("home of Iti") or Whare-tītī ("nesting place of tītī").[1]
According to Rangitāne o Manawatu, Wharite was inhabited by Iti a Tohunga from the Ruakawa Pa area below. The Tohunga was banished to the peak due to his small stature and disfigurements. However, Rangitāne o Manawatu still consulted him for his knowledge related to environmental matters.[1]
Transmitter
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A 1 kW television transmitter was established atop Wharite in 1963, relaying WNTV1 from Wellington. It was replaced with a 100 kW transmitter in 1966.[2] In 2013 the first digital television transmitters were installed.
Television frequencies
| Television Station | Freeview | Owner | Channel | Frequency | Band | Power (kW) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HGTV | 19 | Warner Bros. Discovery New Zealand | 28 | 530.0 MHz | UHF | 32 |
| Al Jazeera | 20 | Al Jazeera Media Network | ||||
| Shine TV | 25 | Rhema Media | ||||
| Hope Channel | 27 | Seventh-day Adventist Church | ||||
| Three | 3 | Warner Bros. Discovery New Zealand | 32 | 562.0 MHz | ||
| Bravo | 4 | |||||
| Eden | 8 | |||||
| Rush | 14 | |||||
| TVNZ 1 | 1 | TVNZ | 34 | 578.0 MHz | ||
| TVNZ 2 | 2 | |||||
| TVNZ Duke | 6 | |||||
| Sky Open | 15 | Sky | 36 | 594.0 MHz | ||
| Whakaata Māori | 5 | New Zealand Government | 38 | 610.0 MHz | ||
| Te Reo | 10 |
Radio frequencies
| Radio Station | Owner | Transmit Frequency | Band | Power (kW) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Radio New Zealand Concert | Radio New Zealand | 89.0 MHz | VHF | 40 |
| Kia Ora FM | National Māori Radio Network | 89.8 MHz | VHF | 1 |
| ZM | New Zealand Media and Entertainment | 90.6 MHz | VHF | 40 |
| Radio Rhema | Rhema Media | 91.4 MHz | VHF | 4 |
| More FM | MediaWorks New Zealand | 92.2 MHz | VHF | 80 |
| The Edge | 93.0 MHz | VHF | 5 | |
| The Sound | 93.8 MHz | VHF | 40 | |
| Channel X | 94.6 MHz | VHF | 5 | |
| The Rock | 95.4 MHz | VHF | 5 | |
| Mai FM | 97.0 MHz | VHF | 5 | |
| The Hits | New Zealand Media and Entertainment | 97.8 MHz | VHF | 40 |
| The Breeze | MediaWorks New Zealand | 98.6 MHz | VHF | 8 |
| Newstalk ZB | New Zealand Media and Entertainment | 100.2 MHz | VHF | 40 |
| Radio New Zealand National | Radio New Zealand | 101.0 MHz | VHF | 8 |
| Niu FM | Pacific Media Network | 103.4 MHz | VHF | 8 |
| Magic | MediaWorks New Zealand | 104.2 MHz | VHF | 5 |
| Coast | New Zealand Media and Entertainment | 105.8 MHz | VHF | 12.5 |
Former analogue television frequencies
The following frequencies were used until 29 September 2013, when Wharite switched off analogue broadcasts (see Digital changeover dates in New Zealand).
| TV Channel | Transmit Channel | Transmit Frequency | Band | Power (kW) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| TV One | 2 | 55.25 MHz | VHF | 100 |
| TV2 | 4 | 175.25 MHz | VHF | 200 |
| TV3 | 7 | 196.25 MHz | VHF | 100 |
| Four | 11 | 224.25 MHz | VHF | 16 |
| Māori Television | 46 | 671.25 MHz | UHF | 250 |
| Prime | 62 | 799.25 MHz | UHF | 250 |
Notes
- The table does not include hour-delayed or music television stations.
References
- "Rangitāne o Manawatu Statutory Acknowledgements" (PDF). Horizons Regional Council. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
- "Parliamentary Debates (Hansard)". Vol. 351. New Zealand Parliament. 28 June 1967. p. 1394.
- RSM Register of Radio Frequencies
- RSM Register of Radio Frequencies
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