And Greg Buchwald of the Motorola Cquam team said this on FB in the AM stereo group:
"That is so incorrect. First, the quadrature carrier is suppressed. If we stopped there, we would have linear QUAM much as Harris produced. That will result in proper carrier level but the envelope term is√ (I^2 + Q^2). Therefore a single tone that contains L-R will have second harmonic distortion. Further, multiple tones (or music /voice) that are stereo contain IM distortion. CQUAM modified the signal by multiplying the resultant QUAM signal by the cosine of the instantaneous phase term. That restores the signal envelope to L+R and no envelope distortion. In reality, L+R is simply applied, in time equalized fashion (and that is the real magic in the exciter) to generate the proper L+R term. The receiver, therefore must divide the incoming signal prior to L-R by cosine phi. This is usually done by feedback utilizing the E and I detectors to extract the cos phi term from the phase modulated signal (not from E as Kahn had sued patent infringement over and lost...another story as I presented that proof to the judge). The IF signal is divided by cos phi and the Q detector now demodulates a clean L-R signal. Misunderstanding of this concept has historically been fairly common. One of the smartest broadcast engineers, Al Resnik, once made the identical statement at an NRSC meeting. I really liked Al but he was an early Kahn, then Harris fan before switching to cquam. I went up to the board, preapologized for what I was about to do, and then showed his error. We spent the evening laughing about it over a few drinks! Al was chief at WLS before taking over for ABC in NY."
"That is so incorrect. First, the quadrature carrier is suppressed. If we stopped there, we would have linear QUAM much as Harris produced. That will result in proper carrier level but the envelope term is√ (I^2 + Q^2). Therefore a single tone that contains L-R will have second harmonic distortion. Further, multiple tones (or music /voice) that are stereo contain IM distortion. CQUAM modified the signal by multiplying the resultant QUAM signal by the cosine of the instantaneous phase term. That restores the signal envelope to L+R and no envelope distortion. In reality, L+R is simply applied, in time equalized fashion (and that is the real magic in the exciter) to generate the proper L+R term. The receiver, therefore must divide the incoming signal prior to L-R by cosine phi. This is usually done by feedback utilizing the E and I detectors to extract the cos phi term from the phase modulated signal (not from E as Kahn had sued patent infringement over and lost...another story as I presented that proof to the judge). The IF signal is divided by cos phi and the Q detector now demodulates a clean L-R signal. Misunderstanding of this concept has historically been fairly common. One of the smartest broadcast engineers, Al Resnik, once made the identical statement at an NRSC meeting. I really liked Al but he was an early Kahn, then Harris fan before switching to cquam. I went up to the board, preapologized for what I was about to do, and then showed his error. We spent the evening laughing about it over a few drinks! Al was chief at WLS before taking over for ABC in NY."