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XHTM-TDT

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XHTM-TDT is a television station licensed to and broadcasting from Altzomoni , State of Mexico on virtual channel 2. Founded in 1952, it was the second television station built outside of Mexico City and the first relayer of Las Estrellas .

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6-458: XHTM, along with Canal 5 transmitter XEX , serves one of Mexico's largest television service areas with a string of transmitters stretching from Taxco de Alarcón, Guerrero to Tlaxcala, Tlaxcala , including transmitters in Pachuca, Hidalgo , Cuernavaca, Morelos and San Martín Texmelucan, Puebla . XHTM's digital transmitter was initially located at Televisa's Puebla transmitter site along with

12-595: A series of moves that added a VHF channel to the Mexico City area. Mexico City had channel 8, then known as XHTM-TV . XHTM moved to channel 9, taking on the XEQ-TV callsign. A new television station was placed on channel 7, Imevisión 's XHIMT-TV . To accomplish this move, XEX-TV was relocated to channel 8 and XEQ-TV to channel 10, picking up the XHTM callsign discarded in Mexico City. In 1994, XEX and XHTM were joined on

18-463: The callsign of his XEQ AM radio in Mexico City, it was the second television station outside of the nation's capital (preceded only by XELD-TV in Matamoros) and the nation's fourth. The original concessionaire was Radio Panamericana, S.A., making it a direct sister station to XEQ radio. The transmission from Paso de Cortés (Cortez Pass), 13,405 feet (4,086 m) high, was said to make channel 9

24-417: The digital operations of its Altzomoni sister stations and both analog and digital signals of Televisa's Puebla independent XHP-TV ; in 2015, final digital facilities were built on Altzomoni, coinciding with a power increase from 45 kW to 236. XHTM channel 10 started life with a different callsign and channel number. In late 1952, XEQ-TV channel 9 took to the air; owned by Emilio Azcárraga and bearing

30-589: The mountain by a third Televisa station, XHATZ-TV (channel 32), as part of a 62-station concession used to help take XEQ-TV's signal national. Digital operations for Televisa's Altzomoni stations—XEX, XHTM and XHATZ—were based in Puebla proper until 2015. XHTM operates one of Mexico's most extensive networks of repeaters: XEX-TDT Too Many Requests If you report this error to the Wikimedia System Administrators, please include

36-415: The world's highest television station. The sign-on of XEQ-TV was the first step in the development of a national relay network, reaching an additional three million people. Not long after, Romulo O'Farrill built his own relay station on the mountain, XEX-TV . The establishment of XEQ thus led to Televisa's massive system of relay stations covering most of Mexico. In 1985, XEX-TV and XEQ-TV were affected by

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