Nope - last one was the old Radio Disney. They shut HD off years ago. There is a hold out in Bryan / College Station on 1620.
Well they're rebroadcasting on HD 2. But yeah that's not the same as being in HD.
Nope - last one was the old Radio Disney. They shut HD off years ago. There is a hold out in Bryan / College Station on 1620.
Well they're rebroadcasting on HD 2. But yeah that's not the same as being in HD.
Well they're rebroadcasting on HD 2. But yeah that's not the same as being in HD.
I didn't know Radio Disney was on HD-2. I just had to re-program my car HD radio after having to replace a battery. It was time to de-program 99.1 HD-2, change 96.5 HD-2 to HD-3, no more need for 89.3 HD-2 or the 99.5 translator in Sugarland. But I didn't hear Radio Disney anywhere. Maybe I didn't look enough. Programming 104.1 HD-2 was impossible because it is still off the air - UGH!!!!
There are a couple of interesting classic rock stations on 103.9 and 104.3, coverage is poor to spotty.
As to 104.1 HD-2, it will be back soon enough Bruce....you're about the only one who complains/notices.....(I dont even have a HD radio so I dont listen to it...I COULD via the stream...or just find anyone with Westwood 1s True Oldies Channel....thats all it is)
There is NO HD-2 on AM....and NO Radio Disney (the original format) on any AM except KDIS in LA....there is some RD on HD-2 and -3s across the country on FMs...and they just announced Radio Disney COUNTRY to be on (tada!) AMs and FMs soon!!
You're not the only one, but I'm willing to bet you're part of a minority.So - am I the only listener to HD radio in the entire city of Houston? Or the only one that cares about it?
I used to listen to HD when in Houston and locally in the Triangle until iHurt put crap on all their HD-2 channels and KVLU dropped their HD altogether. I'd like to see an AM station use HD. I've heard it elsewhere and it sounds better than the standard broadcast AM and unlike CQUAM there is a standard that new radios can decode.
I didn't know Radio Disney was on HD-2. I just had to re-program my car HD radio after having to replace a battery. It was time to de-program 99.1 HD-2, change 96.5 HD-2 to HD-3, no more need for 89.3 HD-2 or the 99.5 translator in Sugarland. But I didn't hear Radio Disney anywhere. Maybe I didn't look enough. Programming 104.1 HD-2 was impossible because it is still off the air - UGH!!!!
There are a couple of interesting classic rock stations on 103.9 and 104.3, coverage is poor to spotty.
I was in a position to compare an AM music station before, when they were C-Quam, and after, when they converted to HD. Before any troll chimes in and accuses me of having a bad radio - it was a local station, the radios were getting plenty of signal, they were in good condition, etc. Mandatory "troll away" statement done. The station changed virtually overnight, so the playlist pre the C-Quam / HD switch was the same as after. Here are (admittedly subjective) results. A number of the songs contained a fair amount of high frequency content, triangles, cymbals, etc. When the station was C-Quam, the high frequency content was crisp and clear ( I was listening on a TM-152 which definitely was NOT bandwidth limited). The same songs, when the station transitioned to HD, sounded completely different. Highs were muddied, distorted, and it sounded like time shifted with respect to the lower frequency content. A triangle, which appeared in high kHz when the station was broadcasting C-Quam, was curiously shifted way down in frequency - as were most of the other percussion instruments. It made for a very surreal sounding experience! Digital artifacts were very apparent, and it was fatiguing to listen to the station for extended periods of time. I found myself lamenting the decision of the station to go HD, because the sound was very inferior. Maybe HD is acceptable to new talk formats where there is no high frequency content in speech, but it is definitely not living up to its promise to "make AM sound like FM". In case you think it was an isolated incident, bad HD encoder or something - there was another AM music station in the city, which was in C-Quam and changed to HD. The results were similar. Personally, I'd like to see AM HD discontinued in favor of wideband mono, or preferably C-Quam.
. Personally, I'd like to see AM HD discontinued in favor of wideband mono, or preferably C-Quam.
If only we could get the manufacturers to do it..or (good luck!) get the FCC to mandate better receivers....MOST AMs already transmit wideband (up to10Khz)....I wish CQUAM/AMAX with Noise Blanking was mandated in ANY radio with FM stereo....AM would have a chance then.....I still love the medium and feel it can still serve...
Good luck. BMW has an electric car with no AM radio at all.
Apparently, the car's motors create so much interference, AM isn't practical in the car.
I see more manufacturers going this route before improving their AM tuners.
Good luck. BMW has an electric car with no AM radio at all.
Apparently, the car's motors create so much interference, AM isn't practical in the car.
I see more manufacturers going this route before improving their AM tuners.
I think only DX'ers can make HD work, and only fanatics about a format are putting up with the blank outs.
I guess I qualify on both fronts - but the ugly, disgusting, gauche trolls have told me over and over again I am an obsolete, strange, unvaluable person for DX'ing or liking oldies / smooth jazz / classical / modern rock / anything they can't monetize to the tasteless masses. Or for not knowing much about a foreign language artist with less top-40 hits than a English speaking artist with the same name.
Or for not knowing much about a foreign language artist with less top-40 hits than a English speaking artist with the same name.