I live about 25 miles from Hartsdale, where WFAS's transmitter is located. And I have HD reception in my car. So far, the 1230 signal cuts in and out for me. No signal in my garage but a good signal on the street. Yet when I was in a different part of NJ today, I also got no signal.
Can someone explain why an owner would choose to only broadcast in HD? Stations like WINS and sometimes WCBS do both. You get the HD signal if you are close enough to the transmitter. But you get analog if you only have an analog radio or are too distant. WINS and WCBS sound great when I hear them in AM HD. I think since the pandemic, WCBS is only in analog these days but I know when the HD signal is on, 880 and 1010 sound like FM stations.
To what advantage is it for WFAS to ONLY broadcast in HD? After all, most radios don't have HD reception.
And I guess there are now three HD-only AM stations? One in the DC area, one near Tampa, and now WFAS north of NYC?
Can someone explain why an owner would choose to only broadcast in HD? Stations like WINS and sometimes WCBS do both. You get the HD signal if you are close enough to the transmitter. But you get analog if you only have an analog radio or are too distant. WINS and WCBS sound great when I hear them in AM HD. I think since the pandemic, WCBS is only in analog these days but I know when the HD signal is on, 880 and 1010 sound like FM stations.
To what advantage is it for WFAS to ONLY broadcast in HD? After all, most radios don't have HD reception.
And I guess there are now three HD-only AM stations? One in the DC area, one near Tampa, and now WFAS north of NYC?