{{short description|Radio station in Mexico City}} {{Infobox radio station | name = XEJP-AM | logo = | city = [[Mexico City]] | country = MX | area = [[Greater Mexico City]] | frequency = {{Frequency|1150|kHz}} | format = [[Regional Mexican]] | branding = Acustik Radio | power = 20,000 [[watt]]s (day)<br>10,000 [[watt]]s (night) (AM){{mexico-inf|AM|accessdate=2015-09-05}} | erp = | class = B | airdate = {{Start date|1955|9|15}} | sister_stations = | owner = Grupo Acustik | licensee = Emisora 1150, S.A. de C.V. | operator = | former_callsigns = XECMQ-AM (1996–2004) | coordinates = {{coord|19|19|56|N|98|59|18|W|type:landmark}} | webcast = {{listenlive|1=https://server2.sit-mexico.com:2199/proxy/acustik?mp=/stream|2=Listen live}} | website = {{URL|1=https://acustik.mx/|2=acustik.mx}} }}

'''XEJP-AM''' (1150&nbsp;kHz) is a [[commercial radio|commercial]] [[radio station]] in [[Mexico City]]. It is owned by Grupo Acustik and it airs a [[Regional Mexican]] [[radio format]].

By day, XEJP is powered at 20,000 [[watt]]s. But to avoid interference to other stations on [[1150 AM]], it reduces power at night to 10,000 [[watt]]s. It uses a [[Omnidirectional antenna|non-directional antenna]]. The [[transmitter]] is off Calle Maravillas in the San Miguel Teotongo neighborhood of Mexico City.<REF>[https://fccdata.org/?lang=en&mex=FER034316CO-105421&mexsvc=AM FCCdata.org/XEJP-AM]</REF>

==History== While the concession for XEJP was awarded in 1936 for a station on 1130&nbsp;kHz, owned by Salvador Monterrubio R., it took nearly two decades to begin broadcasts. It [[sign-on|signed on]] the air on September 15, 1955. In 1964, it took on what would be its longest-running format, ''Radio Variedades'' with a wide-ranging catalog of music in Spanish.

In 1997, Radio Variedades and the XEJP [[call sign]] moved to [[XENET-AM|1320]], and in return 1150 became news-formatted "Formato 21" '''XECMQ-AM'''. In October 2001, 1150 and [[XERC-AM|790]] swapped formats. "Formato 21" went to 790, while 1150 adopted the Spanish oldies format "El Fonógrafo" which had aired on 790 since its 1990 launch. The XEJP calls were reclaimed in 2004 after, in the Infored/Radio Centro split, 1320 became XENET.

In 2017, citing "changes in AM transmission infrastructure", Grupo Radio Centro reorganized all of its AM radio stations, shutting down several and consolidating their programs. El Fonógrafo moved to [[XEN-AM]] 690, sharing its musical format with programs from talk station [[XEQR-AM]] 1030.<ref>{{cite web|date=14 May 2017|url=http://radiocentro.com/carrusel/cambio-de-frecuencias.html|title=Aviso: Cambio de Frecuencias|work=Grupo Radio Centro|access-date=15 May 2017|archive-date=20 June 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170620003115/http://radiocentro.com/carrusel/cambio-de-frecuencias.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> XEJP then went silent.

In January 2019, the IFT approved GRC diplexing XEJP with XEN at its San Miguel Teotongo transmitter site and reducing daytime power from 50,000 to 20,000 watts.<ref>[https://rpc.ift.org.mx/vrpc/pdfs/34316_190730162006_7487.pdf RPC: #036203 Change in Transmitter Location — XEJP-AM]</ref> XEJP began testing from the new site on August 6, 2019 and resumed regular programming as an Acustik Radio station on September 2, 2019. That same day, Acustik began programming two other former Radio Centro AM stations, [[XEUNO-AM]] in Guadalajara and [[XEMN-AM]] (later changed to [[XEFB-AM]]) in Monterrey. The three stations were outright sold to Acustik shortly after.

==External links== *{{FCC-LMS-Facility|102499|XEJP}}

==References== {{Reflist}}

{{Mexico City Radio}}

[[Category:1936 establishments in Mexico]] [[Category:Grupo Radio Centro]] [[Category:Radio stations in Mexico City]] [[Category:Radio stations established in 1936]] [[Category:Regional Mexican radio stations]]

{{Mexico City-radio-station-stub}}