They did in the 30s and 40s.I wonder if they also watched their radio.
They did in the 30s and 40s.I wonder if they also watched their radio.
@DavidEduardo @K.M. Richards I agree. This thread is becoming very tedious and unproductive,
I wish I could, but moderators have to take the chaff with the grain.At the top right of the page, there's a button that says "unwatch." Click it, and it won't show up in your alerts anymore.
I use it all the time.
Better to let the thread burn itself out. Too much locking of threads has an air of censorship, IMHO.Time to be locked maybe?
On point #4: What about the GE Superadios and other similar units?How about some summary posts along with discussion of the potential or possibility for improvement or resolution?
- Many AMs are daytimers and that has no technical resolution
- Many AMs are low power and high on the band and their market has outgrown them
- All AMs are subject to increasing man-made noise from other electrical and electronic devices that didn't exist 50 years ago.
- AM radios made in the last four or five decades are not capable of anything even approaching the theoretical AM fidelity and bandwidth.
- Electric vehicles present challenges to clear reception of AM
- Listener perception of AM is that there is nothing on the band except foreign language and radical right programming.
- Decreasing radio revenues means less money for "quality" programming. }
- Lenders and investors believe AM is dead.
How many average citizens still own one?On point #4: What about the GE Superadios and other similar units?
How many average citizens still own one?
61 out of 333.3 Million.How many still own standalone radios at all?
I think you rounded up excessively.61 out of 333.3 Million.
Superadiol has not been made for what, two decades? I still have two in their original boxes with "Armageddon" marked on them...On point #4: What about the GE Superadios and other similar units?
Okay, you caught me. 58.7 out of 333.3 million.I think you rounded up excessively.
That makes sense, you're probably right.Better to let the thread burn itself out. Too much locking of threads has an air of censorship, IMHO.
And miss out on all the fun?At the top right of the page, there's a button that says "unwatch." Click it, and it won't show up in your alerts anymore.
I use it all the time.
At least one, as I still have a Superadio III. I used to have a Radio Shack long range radio, which was the only place I ever picked up WNBC! I'm sorry, you said "average listener" but I was responding to the post, as written.How many average citizens still own one?
Sorry to break this to you, but you aren't average.At least one, as I still have a Superadio III. I used to have a Radio Shack long range radio, which was the only place I ever picked up WNBC! I'm sorry, you said "average listener" but I was responding to the post, as written.
What is being reported, is that as in any natural disaster, emergency services and search and rescue are on the ground responding in person to the hardest hit areas first. Temporary cell towers have been deployed and additional 911 operators made available to take calls.People in western North Carolina, where all the cell phone towers are out, no electricity so no television, no internet connections, and the mountainous terrain does not lend itself well to FM reception, might be wanting some battery-operated radios right now with an AM band. Severe devastation in that area, due to Hurricane Helene, with severely limited communications on how people can reach badly needed emergency services with water and food provisions.
You have to read the third sentence.Sorry to break this to you, but you aren't average.
These are definitely some large hurdles to overcome, no doubt. The man-made noise is the biggest issue, in my book. It's the cause of many of the other problems/perceived problems with the band. Proper enforcement of FCC standards should theoretically help reduce this significantly, as was discussed upthread, but I'm not betting on the FCC wanting to go this route any time soon...How about some summary posts along with discussion of the potential or possibility for improvement or resolution?
- Many AMs are daytimers and that has no technical resolution
- Many AMs are low power and high on the band and their market has outgrown them
- All AMs are subject to increasing man-made noise from other electrical and electronic devices that didn't exist 50 years ago.
- AM radios made in the last four or five decades are not capable of anything even approaching the theoretical AM fidelity and bandwidth.
- Electric vehicles present challenges to clear reception of AM
- Listener perception of AM is that there is nothing on the band except foreign language and radical right programming.
- Decreasing radio revenues means less money for "quality" programming. }
- Lenders and investors believe AM is dead.