Its radio signal is transmitted from a tower located along Kentucky Route 1297 in rural western Barren County near Railton, with studios located on on McIntosh Street near US 231 on the south side of Bowling Green.
After a few months off the air due to strong winds toppling the transmission tower in 1991, the station had instituted three changes: the station changed frequencies to 105.3 FM to obtain a power increase, changed its call sign to WWWQ on March 1, and adopted a new contemporary hit radio format upon returning to the air on July 9, 1991[3][4] following a tornado that affected the station's broadcasting facility that spring.
[5] In 1997, the station, along with WHHT, WXPC, WCDS, and four other stations in Kentucky, were acquired by a new business venture named Commonwealth Broadcasting Corporation, formed by Steve Newberry and former Kentucky governor Brereton Jones.
[6] WOVO programming was simulcast over WCDS from its 1998 return to the air until it became a sports radio station in 2002.
The effective radiated power of the translator is limited to 250 watts in order to avoid interference with WQXE in nearby Elizabethtown, Kentucky, which is also run at 98.3 Megahertz.
WPTQ broadcasts a classic rock music format to the Bowling Green, Kentucky, area.