The KXTV/KOVR Tower (also known as the Sacramento Joint Venture Tower) is a 2,049 ft (625 m) guyed communication tower in Walnut Grove, California, United States.

KXTV/KOVR tower; note the Doppler weather radar station to the right

Built in 2000, it is the tallest structure in California, the third-tallest guyed mast in the world (as of 2001), and the seventh tallest structure to have ever existed after the destroyed Warsaw radio mast, the Burj Khalifa in Dubai, the Merdeka 118 in Kuala Lumpur, the Shanghai Tower in Shanghai, the Tokyo Sky Tree in Tokyo, and the KRDK-TV mast in North Dakota.

Omni-directional TV transmitting antennas on the tower carry the over-the-air (OTA) broadcast signals for KXTV-TV channel 10 (virtual and transmit) and KOVR-TV channel 13 (virtual) and 25 (transmit). The geographical coordinates for the site, a low-lying rural area about 23 miles (37 km) south-southwest of Sacramento and 25 miles (40 km) north-northwest of Stockton, are 38°14′23″N 121°30′06″W / 38.23972°N 121.50167°W / 38.23972; -121.50167.

In the neighborhood of KXTV/KOVR Tower are two towers of similar height, the Channel 40 and KVIE-TV Channel 6 Tower and the Channel 3-Hearst-Argyle Tower, forming an antenna "farm" on the east side of the Sacramento River and west of the Interstate 5 freeway, which can be easily seen for miles around in every direction.

The antennas on these towers serve as broadcast stations, transmitting TV broadcast signals, providing service to viewers in the Sacramento/Stockton/Modesto DMA (Designated Market Area)[1] in California's Central Valley.

With their significant height and central location in Walnut Grove, they provide line-of-sight (LOS)[2] signal coverage to the adjacent flat valley terrain for over 60 miles (100 km) to the north (Sacramento) and to the south-southeast (Stockton and Modesto). The towers also provide coverage across the valley to the east into the Sierra Nevada foothills and mountains, and to the west to portions of the eastern San Francisco Bay Area (eastern Solano and Contra Costa counties).[3]

The movie Fall was based on this radio tower according to the director.[4]

Current tenants

edit
  • KOVR Ch. 13 (analog (former))
  • KOVR Ch. 25 (digital)
  • KMAX Ch. 21 (digital)
  • KXTV Ch. 10 (analog (former))
  • KXTV Ch. 10 (digital)
  • KTFK Ch. 26 (digital)

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Nielsen DMA Maps, Nielsen.com, retrieved 2016-07-02
  2. ^ Tablo Blog_OTABlog3, TabloTV.com, retrieved 2016-07-02
  3. ^ Online Coverage Map Browser for KXTV, TVFool.com, retrieved 2016-07-02
  4. ^ "Director of New 'Fall' Movie Says Actors Were Never More Than 100 Feet High". 12 August 2022.
edit