1967-1974 | 1974-1977 | 1977-1979 | 1979-1981 | 1981-1995 |
1986-1995 | 1995-2001 | 2001-2011 | 2011-2022 | 2022-present |
BTW-3 Bunbury/GSW-9 Mount Barker[]
1967-1974[]
BTW-3 Bunbury began transmission on 10 March 1967 while GSW-9 Mount Barker opened as a relay on 28 August 1968. The callsigns stood for Bunbury Television Western Australia and Great Southern Western Australia.
BTW-3/GSW-9-10[]
1974-1977[]
On 29 August 1974, relay station GSW-10 began transmission in Albany.
Channels 3 and 9[]
1977-1979[]
Golden West Network[]
1979-1981[]
In 1979, Jack Bendat purchased South Western Telecasters (owner of BTW/GSW) and changed the company's name to Golden West Network (GWN).
By 1981, GWN was transmitting to BTW-3 Bunbury, with relays at GSW-9 Mount Barker and GSW-10 Albany, with translators at BTW-6 Narrogin, BTW-10 in both Katanning and Mawson, BTW-11 Wagin, and BTW-55 Northam. Two new translators would later open up at Gnowangerup and Kojonup, both on UHF-66.
In the years that followed, BTW-10 Mawson would move to VHF-11 in order to accomodate NEW-10 (now 10 Perth), BTW-11 would move to VHF-6, BTW-6 would move to UHF-60, and BTW-55 would move to UHF-59.
GWN South West and Great Southern[]
1981-1995[]
1986-1995[]
1995–2001[]
2001–2011[]
GWN7 South West and Great Southern[]
2011–2022[]
Seven South West and Great Southern[]
2022-present[]
Television in Western Australia
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Perth ABW (ABC TV) | TVW (Seven) | STW (Nine) | NEW (10) South West and Great Southern Kalgoorlie Geraldton Remote Areas |
Seven Network Sydney | Melbourne | Brisbane (Regional QLD) | Adelaide | Perth
Seven Sport Digital West Australian Newspapers
Former/ Defunct Notes
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