XHUDG-TDT


XHUDG-TDT is a television station licensed to Guadalajara, Jalisco. Broadcasting on digital channel 27 from a transmitter on Cerro del Cuatro in Tlaquepaque, the station is owned and operated by the University of Guadalajara under the auspices of the Sistema Universitario de Radio y Televisión, which also operates a network of radio stations led by XHUDG-FM 104.3 Guadalajara.

History

As early as 1991, UDG sought a permit to build a television station and was denied; instead, the permit was built out as Jalisco's state television system, XHGJG-TV channel 7. It tried two more times to obtain a permit, once in 1995 and again in 1997.
In 2001, UDG and Televisa signed an agreement under which UDG supplied some programs to be broadcast on Televisa's local channel 4, XHG-TV.
On January 27, 2010, Cofetel at last approved the award of a permit for a non-commercial television station to the University of Guadalajara to construct XHUDG-TV. The station went on the air on January 31, 2011, with a staff of 100. The University of Guadalajara thus became the sixth university in Mexico to sign on a television station.
Not long after, UDG applied for a digital companion channel for its station, and in November 2013, the first test transmissions of XHUDG-TDT were broadcast. On December 16, 2015, XHUDG, along with other television stations in Guadalajara, shut off its analog signal and went digital-only.
Until December 31, 2016, the station had over-the-air coverage in Los Angeles as the second digital channel of KVMD. UDG also produces an international variant of XHUDG for worldwide distribution.

Expansion in Jalisco

In December 2016, the Federal Telecommunications Institute authorized new public concessions for television stations to the Universidad de Guadalajara, at Ciudad Guzmán and Lagos de Moreno.
The Ciudad Guzmán transmitter, which is co-located with C7 on Cerro de la Escalera, entered program service on January 31, 2018. The Lagos de Moreno transmitter followed on September 19.
On November 5, 2018, the IFT approved a fourth transmitter, XHCPAF-TDT RF channel 8, to serve Puerto Vallarta.

Programming

XHUDG programming is primarily cultural and educational in nature. Many of the UDG-produced programs formerly seen on XHG under the Televisa contract are now seen on XHUDG, such as Claves, La Brújula and La Vagoneta.
XHUDG has also rebroadcast programs produced by teveunam and by Canal 22, but those two television services are now available in their entirety as digital subchannels of OPMA repeater station XHOPGA-TDT.
The station produces a local newscast, La Señal Informativa, which is aired three times daily, at 7am, 1pm and 8pm. The newscast builds upon the existing radio news operation of XHUDG-FM.
Following the University club's relegation from the Liga MX to the Ascenso MX, XHUDG became the exclusive broadcaster of the "Leones Negros" home games since the Apertura 2015 tournament.

44 Noticias

On March 13, 2017, UDG began transmissions of 44 Noticias on its 44.2 subchannel in Guadalajara. The new channel broadcasts from 6am to midnight and carries the existing Señal Informativa newscasts as well as additional news, political, cultural and sports shows and documentaries. It is the first local news channel in the city and the first news channel produced by an educational station in Mexico.

Digital television

The three Canal 44 transmitters in operation carry two subchannels:
ChannelVideoAspectLabelProgramming
44.11080iUDG C44Main XHUDG programming
44.2480iUDG TVU44 Noticias

In March 2018, in order to facilitate the repacking of TV services out of the 600 MHz band, XHUDG was assigned channel 27 for continued digital operations, relocating to the new channel in December 2018. Channel 27 had already been assigned for XHUDG's two repeaters.

Repeaters

Two repeaters of XHUDG-TDT, both on RF channel 27, have been authorized to operate by the Federal Telecommunications Institute, filling a gap in service for some 400,000 people that are shielded from the main signal at Cerro del Cuatro. These transmitters are expected to be in service by early 2019.