OKCRadioGuy said:
For the record I have been engineering high school football games on a local 50,000 watt radio station for over 15 years. We use and will continue to use off-air montoring for all local games, which in our case is ALL games except one every other year. We use analog RF Martis. You know what? It is pretty DAMN reliable. In fact I consistantly watch other broadcasters with their assorted new crap have drop outs here and there and scramble around like chickens with their heads cut off. Guess what? Good old analog junk just keeps plugging away.
You make a very good point.
At the Philadelphia FM station where I was CE for twelve years, we had a VHF Marti system which I modified with outboard noise reduction (prototype Radio Systems Dolby S compandors which I bought cheap) and it sounded fine. Audio response started to roll off above 10 kHz but this wasn't really noticeable. At the remote site, I simply plugged an FM tuner into the PA amplifier and the jock's headphone amp; there was no need to run mix-minus or any special feeds. For IFB, we had a choice of SCA or a 450 MHz repeater installed at the transmitter site. All analog with virtually no delay.
The advantages of this system were portability, reliability, and low cost. I could quickly arrange for "ad hoc" remotes in locations where Verizon wouldn't run lines, for instance in Fairmount Park for the Dad Vail Regatta, and on the sidewalk outside Veterans Stadium. Noise reduction took care of the hiss which is often a problem with RPU signals less than 100 microvolts, so it wasn't unusual to make clean shots from 25 to 30 miles out. We used horizontally polarized yagis on both ends (with a bandpass cavity on the receiver) and never had a hint of intermod. Needless to say, this system avoided the hassle and expense of ordering ISDN service from Verizon.
We did use ISDN for the nightclub and concert venue remotes that were scheduled on an long-term basis and set up by interns or part-timers, but on several occasions I had to use the RPU system at some of these sites because the ISDN had failed. Verizon was such a PITA to deal with on disconnect orders. At least half of these weren't entered properly in their system and I would continue to be billed for service that should have been canceled months earlier.
I'm now part-owner of a small market AM station that recently began simulcasting on an FM translator. I doubt that the local carrier could provide ISDN service even if we were willing to pay for it. So to improve audio quality, we recently installed an RPU system and will begin using this wherever possible, instead of our older cellphone-based system.
I realize that New York City is a different kind of environment -- but in most other markets, analog RPU continues to do a fine job... and it's so much less expensive than the digital alternatives!