Triple M Brisbane
Their playlists then included AC/DC, The Angels, Van Halen, ZZ Top and Talking Heads as well as supporting Australian pub rock bands such as INXS, Hunters & Collectors and the Choirboys.Promotions, including the Skyshow featuring the first afterburner F111s in the world, and involvement in all things Brisbane supplemented the popular on-air format.Around the same time, a new FM station called B105 gained popularity with rap and dance music, taking over the top spot.This building is full of character, featuring a quirky lift, green carpets and a distinctive spiral staircase linking the two floors.The Queen Street equipment included MTE mixing consoles and ITC Delta cartridge machines.Instead, FM104 Triple M continued to use outdated cartridge machines until 1999, when the updated Maestro digital play-out system was installed as part of an Austereo nationwide upgrade.Southern Cross Austereo announced that in 2019 Triple M and B105 will move into new facilities at The Barracks[3] FM104 was originally transmitted using two RCA BTF-20E 20 kilowatt transmitters in an A/B failsafe configuration running from the BTQ Seven towers at Mount Coot-tha.An increase in Effective radiated power was granted in the early 1990s, and an arrangement was reached with a rival station B105 to share a new antenna, combiner, and floor space at TVQ Ten, which had a higher tower.TX Australia is currently under contract to maintain all of Austereo Brisbane's FM transmission infrastructure, including antennas, transmitters, and combiners.The weekend culminated in a Sunday afternoon broadcast from the station's carpark at 309 North Quay, with drinks, food, and live-to-air performances from The Screaming Jets, The Choirboys and Glenn Shorrock.These games are generally played on Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday and Monday nights and are broadcast live from the relevant stadiums.