KB says so as a dedicated listener – and Bob Savage says-so as a dedicated transmitter-owning broadcaster [and aficionado]. I agree! I have been listening to FOURTEEN wideband and/or “decent-sounding” AM tuners in various form-factors spanning 1989 to present, and I am impressed [and depressed at the same time due to the elusive marketplace] – I just DON’T understand... I DO recognize that there are TOO MANY “crappy” AM receivers out there that may poison the rank ‘n file radio listener. I wish more of these folks could find an AM tuner beyond what they set beside their bedside in the form of a $20 Sony clock radio they scored at Wally-World.
Here’s my roster: [from 1970] – Radio Shack’s STA 65B home stereo receiver [analog, very-low distortion, and well beyond 5k]; [from 1972] – the Allied/Fisher 395 home stereo receiver about 7.5k]; the 1977 McIntosh MR-76 with selectable bandwidth [10k/4k] – AWESOME-sounding; Sony’s SRF-A1 multi-mode AM stereo “WalkMan”; the DXer's-dream I-COM R-71a – a general coverage shortwave receiver built for Amplitude Modulation with an accessory Collins broad-skirt 16kHz I.F. filter [8kHz audio bandwidth]; GE’s gen-one “SuperRadio” [the BEST portable I’ve ever held in my hands]; Carver’s second stab at “hi-fi” AM—the TX 11-b home-stereo component AM tuner on misguided steroids [20/10kHz – ultra-hi-bandwidth/low-distortion/lack of RF sensitivity] ... And closing-out the decade – the Denon 680 10kHz NRSC-standard benchmark C-QUAM AM stereo. Today, I enjoy the Sangean DT-200V “walkman”; their WR-2 table radio; my trusty C Crane receiver, and the “retro” Tivoli Model One... ALL have a fine-sounding AM section. The potable iPal I tote is the same [but needs a Terk loop nearby]. By-far THE BEST path to quality AM radio is the "homemade" Meduci AMX-2000... Jeff Deck has crammed literal “AM nirvana” into a Radio Shack project box while having fun (or revenge) at his bench—It ain’t pretty, but it delivers FM QUALITY [at a minimum] from qualifying stations – absolutely AWESOME! There is NO EXCUSE for the “AM dilemma” when one listens-to and considers this fine effort!
So WHY do we need digital... Don’t get me wrong – I like DirecTV in ones ‘n zeros, my 2000-plus CDs thru the A-D converter, and my DVD collection on the big-screen, BUT – the historic AM scheme clearly doesn’t allow for an acceptable “hybrid” of both... Do ONE OR THE OTHER – NOT BOTH! On the AM receivers I have noted, it is striking that analog quality has been givin’-over to the sacrificial pit... This IS NOT the “leap-of-faith” that healthy AM stations need to be making [the less-healthy CAN’T afford Bobby Stumble’s science-fair project]... Analog AM SOUNDS GREAT... ‘Consider it a national resource, and for God’s-sake—PRESERVE IT!
Here’s my roster: [from 1970] – Radio Shack’s STA 65B home stereo receiver [analog, very-low distortion, and well beyond 5k]; [from 1972] – the Allied/Fisher 395 home stereo receiver about 7.5k]; the 1977 McIntosh MR-76 with selectable bandwidth [10k/4k] – AWESOME-sounding; Sony’s SRF-A1 multi-mode AM stereo “WalkMan”; the DXer's-dream I-COM R-71a – a general coverage shortwave receiver built for Amplitude Modulation with an accessory Collins broad-skirt 16kHz I.F. filter [8kHz audio bandwidth]; GE’s gen-one “SuperRadio” [the BEST portable I’ve ever held in my hands]; Carver’s second stab at “hi-fi” AM—the TX 11-b home-stereo component AM tuner on misguided steroids [20/10kHz – ultra-hi-bandwidth/low-distortion/lack of RF sensitivity] ... And closing-out the decade – the Denon 680 10kHz NRSC-standard benchmark C-QUAM AM stereo. Today, I enjoy the Sangean DT-200V “walkman”; their WR-2 table radio; my trusty C Crane receiver, and the “retro” Tivoli Model One... ALL have a fine-sounding AM section. The potable iPal I tote is the same [but needs a Terk loop nearby]. By-far THE BEST path to quality AM radio is the "homemade" Meduci AMX-2000... Jeff Deck has crammed literal “AM nirvana” into a Radio Shack project box while having fun (or revenge) at his bench—It ain’t pretty, but it delivers FM QUALITY [at a minimum] from qualifying stations – absolutely AWESOME! There is NO EXCUSE for the “AM dilemma” when one listens-to and considers this fine effort!
So WHY do we need digital... Don’t get me wrong – I like DirecTV in ones ‘n zeros, my 2000-plus CDs thru the A-D converter, and my DVD collection on the big-screen, BUT – the historic AM scheme clearly doesn’t allow for an acceptable “hybrid” of both... Do ONE OR THE OTHER – NOT BOTH! On the AM receivers I have noted, it is striking that analog quality has been givin’-over to the sacrificial pit... This IS NOT the “leap-of-faith” that healthy AM stations need to be making [the less-healthy CAN’T afford Bobby Stumble’s science-fair project]... Analog AM SOUNDS GREAT... ‘Consider it a national resource, and for God’s-sake—PRESERVE IT!