The analog signal is separate from the digital one, and each can be mono or stereo or even have separate content. The HD-1 per the FCC must duplicate the programming of the analog signal, but that is a rule, not an engineering "truth".I know that but is this analog signal in mono while the digital is in stereo? or do they have different feeds for each.
Like hmmm. what I don't understand is, how is it possible for the analog signal to be in mono but the digital to be in stereo?
I know HD piggybacks on the side channels of the analog carrier...
The digital signal can all be used by the HD-1 or split into multiple pieces.
There is no rule that you must broadcast with the highest bitrate.Isn't there a rule from the FCC about how much of the codec the HD one must use?
The station gets some flexibility in how they assign the bit rates to each subchannel.If a radio station has 4 HD signals, how is the codec split up?
No, it is the HD Codec, something that IBiquity dreamed up so they could patent it.What codec is used for HD? I believe its MP3?
There are lots of things in an airchain that can degrade the audio quality of HD radio - lossy compression of a music library is one of them.Which then that means that the analog signal will sound better as its a not compressed signal, right?
But then that also depends. If a station isn't using lossless audio for their music library then that won't matter. Is that also correct?