Zach said:
What a cluster-f. Now that many new cars are coming with HD radio as standard, they should be upgrading to max out their HD facilities, not turn them off. This is the time to make it work, and the stations are giving up.
I know everyone here thinks HD is a joke, but in this case the stations are the ones botching this experiment, now. This is like when iPods exploded in popularity, all the sudden radio felt the ground underneath shift and their response was so completely wrong it was laughable (they invented "Jack FM" and became exactly like what they were trying to compete with, giving people more reason to stop listening, because who wants to hear someone else's iPod on shuffle when you can have your own?)
Sometimes I think it's radio itself that's digging its own grave, not the competition.
I would say that until the big automakers adopt HD as standard, the public won't get exposed to it. Which, in its present form, is a GOOD thing. I will elaborate below. What you have now is more than a dozen auto makers, but they are all small. The aggregate total is probably pretty good, but you don't have a FM, Ford, or Chrysler putting HD standard in the dash. A lot of the smaller auto makers offer it, but it isn't standard, or is combined with everything else that competes with HD.
I don't think it is a joke. I own several HD radios and make use of them. Not a joke, really, but a tragedy - caused by bad engineering right from the start. I tried to introduce my sister-in-law to the technology the other day, she rode with us while I had HD radio on the oldies - like a lot of Houstonians, she is a disenfranchised oldies fan, who now pretty much drives with the radio OFF. I thought maybe HD radio would give her a way to hear oldies again, there are two oldies channels in Houston on HD-2. Drop out after drop out, dead silence because there is no fall back for HD-2's, and after a few minutes she was asking me to put it on satellite. Another potential HD buyer turned off by HD dropouts. I know exactly why - 93.7 is a highly rated Houston station, and it shouldn't bother KRBE 104.1 because it is 10.4 MHz offset. Protections in place for 10.6 and 10.8 MHz completely protect 104.1, but if somebody drives past and their radio is tuned to 93.7, even if they don't have an HD radio - their local oscillator knocks the HD out on 104.1. If that car happens to be behind, in front, or beside you in heavy traffic, it is a long term blackout of HD-2.
The geniuses who dreamed up this system should have known! But they glibly ignored the first adjacent interference they were causing, not realizing it also made HD vulnerable to dropping from stations 10.4 to 11 MHz away. It would have been far better to blow away RDS, SCA, and reading for the blind at 92 MHz - all functions done better by HD anyway - and put the sidebands within the existing channel. They made AM drop extended frequency response and C-Quam to run HD, they should have done the same with those little used auxiliary services on FM. But they didn't, and we are left with a kludgey unreliable system that is an embarrassment to the industry. We don't need to be demonstrating this turkey to people if we want it to be adopted more widely, because it isn't flying.
Understand - KRBE is a full class C station - 100kW ERP off a 2000' tower over flat terrain. I can literally see the towers 20 miles away. But all it takes to wipe out HD is the car next to you to be tuned to 93.7. And it happens a lot. BAD engineering, BAD decisions made up front = defective system that doesn't work in common real world listening scenarios. Time to pull the plug and take losses before it gets worse. GM, Ford, and Chrysler can spot an engineering disaster when they see it. HD isn't ready for prime time, it never was. When it inevitably goes under, I'll have orphan HD radios just like I have orphan C-Quam radios now. Thank goodness they are also capable of analog reception, because that is all that will be eventually available. I will miss the HD-2 formats. But arrogance has doomed HD radio to eventual failure. It didn't have to be that way.