KCBS does sound good for an AM. And I'm just enough of the right kind of geek to admit that their top-of-the-hour sounds a lot punchier on the AM than it does the FM. More aggressive compression.
I agree.
I've done side-by-side comparisons using my '94 GMC truck's stock stereo, so it still has decent-for-AM bandwidth, probably 6kHz, give or take (fun little fact about this stereo: in AM C-QUAM mode, it actually opens up the bandwidth a bit with close signals, probably something like 7.5-8kHz. I know this only because I have a little transmitter that is capable of broadcasting in that mode; the only C-QUAM station still in existence is KVON, which is too distant to pull in clearly). I've also used my Sony SRF-A100 to listen to the AM in wideband mode.
In either case, normal narrowband mono or wideband, KCBS-AM sounds fundamentally indistinguishable from the FM, except of course for the fact that as you noted, the AM sounds punchier and clearer. The FM, of course, has a much wider frequency response, but the highs seem a bit annoying. Perhaps they're a bit on the hot side? Or maybe it's because I listen on AM the vast majority of the time and I'm simply not used to hearing it on FM.
I've tried listening on FM, but I always go back to AM despite the static and less-good frequency response because it just sounds better to me (modern car radios don't help, however with their sharp cutoffs somewhere around 4 kHz, which is okay for talk, but almost worthless for music).
Just one guy's opinion: I have KGO -- (no, I won't) --
Attaboy,
@Weiserguy ! And while we're at it, it's the Fog City Diner, the Nimitz Freeway and Long's Drugs, dammit!
Get me Van Amburg and Herb Caen! We'll get this straightened out.
throw in THE DOGGIE DINER too!!!
If you've been to the East Bay in downtown Lafayette before the early 2000s, there was also Freddy's Pizza. It's not widely known across the entire Bay Area I don't think, but it was locally popular.
Oh, and speaking of restaurants, who can forget the Cliff House?
***and this thread has now slid firmly back into discussion of, among other things, inane and sundry San Francisco factoids and obscure trivia***
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