fm-engineer said:
Are you sure there is that much difference with the price? Maybe the Orban is the "list" price. I believe the 9300 is an updated 9200, same processing structure and sound. Maybe Bob O will chime in. I would demo both and make the decision that way. Also, Vorsis and BW have some AM selections around $2k. My guess is the Orban is the list price. Good luck.
busterluck said:
What processor for mono AM would you buy today?
The best ones seem to be Orban 9300 or Omnia 1-AM. For mono AM the Orban sells for $3,915, and the Omni 1 AM sells for Only $2350. Question is why is the Orban priced so much higher than the Omnia? There can't be a $1565 dollar difference between the two as far as performance.
What is the best pick between the two and why do you think so?
I have a client who has a pop music format and is looking for the best one of the two products.
I have heard that Omni outsells Orban processors by a large margin these days.
To start with, audio processors are not interchangeable. Each has a different sound and different technology. So making price comparisons between brands is important when one has a fixed budget, but it is far more important to evaluate the *sound* of the processing with your physical plant (many AM plants have antenna that are sufficiently narrowband to interact with the audio processing) and with your format.
The 9300 is indeed an updated 9200 with the following extra features:
1. Anti-aliased clippers running at 256 kHz sample rate. (The 9200's clippers are not anti-aliased and run at 128 kHz.)
2. Parametric system lowpass filters whose transition region shape is selectable by the user to trade off ringing against brightness according to the user's preference.
3. Improved PC Remote software, which can connect via Ethernet or RS232 serial.
4. More versatile customization of presets.
In my opinion, AM processing is the hardest to design because the bandwidth of real-world radios varies widely but is never enough to render a real "high fidelity" sound compared to FM. (Yes, I know that there are a few AM radios with 10 kHz audio around, but they are just a drop in the ocean of radios whose -3 dB audio bandwidth averages around 2 kHz.)
At Orban, when we make AM factory presets we tune and test with three radios (representing 1.5 kHz steep-slope narrowband audio, 2 kHz audio with a gentle rolloff, and 5 kHz with a steep rolloff) and we also introduce impairments like white noise (representing distant reception) and power line buzz. More than any other processing, AM processing represents the art of compromise, where the goal is to provide an enjoyably listenable signal to as many of a station's potential audience as possible.
As for the 9400, we adjusted the presets to have more energy in the 3 kHz region compared to the 9200 or 9300. This choice was based on the new NRSC study of AM radios and the fact that the AM band has moved more towards talk, so effortless speech intelligibility, even on narrowband radios in the presence of substantial interference, is a higher priority than it was when the band had more music programming. And even in music programming, speech intelligibility is important.
The 9400 also has a number of general purpose and music-oriented presets. All of these sound substantially different, so its is important to "shop" presets when evaluating the processing--the 9400 doesn't have just one "sound." Other than the fact that the 9400 is a stereo processor, the main difference between the 9300 and 9400's processing algorithms is that the 9400 has a clipping distortion controller like the one we first introduced in the 8400, so speech (in particular) is cleaner than it is when processed by the 9300. We feel that this improvement justifies the 9400's price premium, particularly because its effect can be dialed back to any degree desired, so at its limit, a 9400 can provide 9300-style processing. However, the converse is not true.
Because the 9400's compressor threshold controls and parametric equalizer controls are available to the user, users can dial back this presence peak if they wish. But as always with AM radio, it is important to take into account the effect such a strategy will have on speech intelligibility in narrowband radios in the presence of noise and interference, which only seems to grow worse in the AM band.
Bob Orban