audioguy said:Let's go for 226! With WBBM switching on their FM signal tomorrow, it's high time to retire the useless hiss generator on 780. They should also shorten their ID by dropping the WBBM-HD moniker. How many HD-AM listeners could they possibly have?
Whether it is Chicago, NYC, L.A., Tampa, or here in Sa-ra-so-ta!, I would disagree as the fidelity and stereo would have no need on a spoken word station. But for advertising on that spoken word station, the impact with stereo on the listener is there. That's what convinced the broadcasters to begin with. Too bad the range/signal level has to be too high for real world reception. Otherwise we may have been speaking differently about AM-HD.Zach said:audioguy said:Let's go for 226! With WBBM switching on their FM signal tomorrow, it's high time to retire the useless hiss generator on 780. They should also shorten their ID by dropping the WBBM-HD moniker. How many HD-AM listeners could they possibly have?
There truly is no need for it at all, not that there ever was for news to begin with!
badjef said:C-quAM had the same problem. We all know what happened to that.
audioguy said:Let's go for 226! With WBBM switching on their FM signal tomorrow, it's high time to retire the useless hiss generator on 780. They should also shorten their ID by dropping the WBBM-HD moniker. How many HD-AM listeners could they possibly have?
Signal level at the receiver. Any noise at all would drop it into mono. Even the sound of the horn in the car!Zach said:badjef said:C-quAM had the same problem. We all know what happened to that.
What problem is that?
It absolutely dropped out. The reason was the pulse count. It needed continuous pulses. If it missed one, it would drop to mono and start counting again. If it was interrupted, it started the count over.Zach said:Hm. I was under the impression that the last generation of C-QUAM receiver chips resolved most of the platform motion issues. Of course, that was probably after stereo's last breath industry-wise, but the solution should be there for future use.
As far as signal level at the receiver, I've never experienced the issue you described in the few stereo receivers I've worked with. On the old Toyota OEM radio it didn't drop to mono until there was almost nothing audible to hear.
badjef said:I was proudly a "Kahn-man". It would stay in stereo long after C-QuAM was out. With no platform motion.
I may still have WNNNBC, WQXR and (WRB)Q-105AM from the 1987-1990 time frame.Zach said:badjef said:I was proudly a "Kahn-man". It would stay in stereo long after C-QuAM was out. With no platform motion.
Wish I could have heard it. There doesn't seem to be any repository of Kahn or Magnavox or anything else online anymore, just a few C-QUAM airchecks.
N1WVQ said:It sounds worse & was supported by AM killers such as Randy Michaels.
Then Kahn had that dumbass lawsuit of his to stop ANY OTHER STEREO METHOD from reaching AM further allowing FM to get ahead & now we're at a point where ANY stereo method to AM didn't work & FM has about 80% market share.
Never had a problem with the signal dropping out because of the horn or anything else inside the car, unless of course you're talking about a signal that is so weak anyway that any other electrical interference would wipe out the signal as well.
I had Kahn in the car along with C-CrAP for several years. Motorola was the AM StereoN1WVQ said:From the airchecks that I had heard Kahn's sound was inferior. You talk about C-QuAM
being an AM killer but it seems that was the Kahn methodology.
There was no winners here, except for Motorola. Welcome, Motorola, you won theC-QuAM for the win.
badjef said:There was no winners here, except for Motorola. Welcome, Motorola, you won the
building even though it burnt down while you were fighting in it.
P.S. David, dropping out of stereo does not eliminate the platform motion!
That is killing the baby!
You are correct. There was no winners. But Kahn was not the bad guy. His system was ready to go, not 1978, but 1960’s!DavidEduardo said:badjef said:There was no winners here, except for Motorola. Welcome, Motorola, you won the
building even though it burnt down while you were fighting in it.
There was no winner. By the time any system could be used on the air, the window of opportunity for AM stereo had long passed. We have Leonard Kahn to thank the the delay.
P.S. David, dropping out of stereo does not eliminate the platform motion!
That is killing the baby!
That’s right there was a window of opportunity that was ideal, but the window never completely closes. If it did, AM-HD would have not even had a chance of acceptance.There was a station-end fix for that. As I said, the issue was timing... AM stereo became available too late for AM stations to hold the line on audience erosion. In many markets today, AM has a single digit share of listening among people under the age of 55.