Kvzk tv

Svzk tv

KvZZK TV AMERICA SAAMOA K11UUU-D is a TV transmitter in Pago Pago which transmits in the VHF 11 VHF format using the analogue ATSC e-feed. Established on January 18, 2002, the licence for the canal is owned by Samoa Systems Inc. The present paper is part of WikiProject United States Territories, a joint project to enhance the cover of United States Territories on Wikipedia.

To join, please go to the projects page, where you can join the discussions and see a shortlist of pending work. The Miss Island Queen is an annual procession in American Samoa, considered the oldest of its kind in the Southern Ocean. It was first celebrated in 1979 before it underwent a number of changes.

In 1980 and 1982 there was no parade, because he had to endure property transfers. Pages not categorized as "TV channels in American Samoa" are in this category, out of 6 pages overall It may not contain the latest changes (). The disambigation page shows items related to the PBS 2 theme.

NBC TV Net is an US TV net consisting of 11 of its own and almost 200 affiliated channels, with NBC's own channels separate from private channels and listed in alphabetic order by town.

You will find interesting information and article about the individual stops.....

Mount Álava

It was kind enough to pick up our gear when it reached the archipelago, which it was before us, and it offered us a place to store it while we were working and orienting on the archipelago. We' ve sent 18 crates of things to the isles.

As a rule, we try to send such cartons on palettes to minimise the risk of losing or throwing each carton over. We knew this case that there was no way to get that much gear on a palette to Samoa, so we bite the ball and send the single crates by FedEx freight.

It was all right until the on-line tracker showed crates on their way to New Zealand and Australia and got trapped there. One thing Federal Foreign Office failed to point out was that it handed over the outfit to a third-party in New Zealand (something we were reassured would not be happening -- the ski to ski to ski to ski) for ultimate transportation to American Samoa.

While the crates seemed to be spread all over the South Pacific, they set off to Pago Pago via New Zealand, the island of Samoa and eventually American Samoa. He found a possible place not near the vessels in the image below, but near the antennae in the distance above the vessels on Mount Alava, 1610 feet high, where the transmitter masts were in.

At the bottom was the beginning of the "road" that ran along the Maugaloa Ridge and took you to the top of the mountains. There was a turn-off from the north end of the city of Pago Pago at Fagasa Pass. At the bottom was the Pago Pago harbour with a seaview from above.

Breakers Point and Fa'ata'aga Point were on the muzzle of the harbour on the lefthand side, Tututulu Point (the next one) and Goat Island Point on the right. The Goat Island and the containership were on the other side of the harbour. When you come out of the shrubs in the front of the photo below, you hardly see a wire leading to the other side of the harbour.

During the 1960s, this was a ropeway line - the longest in the Pacific - initially used to maintain TV broadcasting systems, but then it became a major touristic area. After the construction of the "road" on which we arrived, the funicular was inoperative.

It is not the real wire in the image, but one that would be used to pull the wire through if the wire were ever reassembled. Underneath were the master transmitter and the shed. The inside of the house was your usual TV broadcast material. This television channel was initially constructed in 1964 by the then Gouverneur Hyrum Rex Lee.

Across the aerials on the top of the hill, a fountain was constructed by the U.S. National Park Service. Maugaloa Ridge peak - where we hiked, toured and drove - was the boundary of the Tutuila part of the American Samoa National Park, which occupied much of the north bank of Tutuila.

On the other side of the valley there was a cable with which one could walk down a precipitous part of an urban footpath, which one could cover all the way to the foot of the hill by walking or trapping, I assume. Moreover, although the rocks are tough enough when cast onto you, they are actually quite versatile, and the high transmitter masts that bend in the breeze and are fixed to the mountains would have meant that the area on the top of the hill would have moved enough to be received by the sensor.

Returning from the hill was as thrilling as the ascent. This" street" was promoted in the travel guidebooks as a footpath. I' m guessing it was a better footpath than a street.

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