WBT (AM)
| 
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|---|---|
| Broadcast area | Charlotte metropolitan area | 
| Frequency | 1110 kHz | 
| Branding | News Talk 1110/99-3 WBT | 
| Programming | |
| Language | English | 
| Format | News/talk | 
| Affiliations | |
| Ownership | |
| Owner | 
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| History | |
| First air date | March 22, 1922 (also earlier broadcasts as experimental station 4XD) | 
| Call sign meaning | Randomly assigned | 
| Technical information | |
| Licensing authority | FCC | 
| Facility ID | 30830 | 
| Class | A | 
| Power | 50,000 watts | 
| Transmitter coordinates | 35°7′56.52″N 80°53′22.26″W / 35.1323667°N 80.8895167°W | 
| Repeater(s) | |
| Links | |
| Public license information  | |
| Webcast | 
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| Website | www | 
WBT (1110 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station serving the Charlotte metropolitan area, including parts of North Carolina and South Carolina. The station airs a news/talk radio format simulcast on Chester, South Carolina-licensed WBT-FM (99.3) and the HD2 digital subchannel of co-owned WLNK. First licensed on March 18, 1922, it was one of America's first radio stations.
WBT is owned by Urban One, with studios and offices located off West Morehead Street, just west of Uptown Charlotte, co-located with the city's CBS television affiliate, WBTV, currently owned by Gray Television but at one time co-owned with WBT Radio.
WBT broadcasts 50,000 watts around the clock as the only Class A clear-channel station in the Carolinas. Its transmitter site is a three-tower facility in south Charlotte, off Nations Ford Road. During daylight hours it uses a single non-directional antenna and is audible in much of the central Carolinas. At night, all three towers are used in a directional pattern that limits its signal toward the west, to avoid interfering with KFAB in Omaha, Nebraska, the other Class A station on the frequency. Even with this restriction, it can be heard across much of the eastern half of North America with a good radio. For many years, WBT boasted that it could be heard "from Maine to Miami" at night.