LinoNYC said:but getting WSM 650 AM in Boston area at night is gone from WFAN's IBOC signal.
This is pretty much the extent of complaint you will get: man in Boston can't hear station in Nashville.
BTW: They stream and have archives.
Lino
Savage said:Right now the scorecard is 220ish HD-AMs on the air, with about half-ish that on at night. This is not a significant number of AM stations, with even the most optimistic iBiquity-cobbled numbers claiming about 4% of operating AMs using IBOC. So that would be: 96% NOT participating, which means, even using Gleason's figures, WYSL's Eduardo-maligned audience ratings are outperforming iBiquity.
But even this meager showing is misleading as a predictor of future IBOC growth since the preponderant majority of those include most 50kw major market AMs, many of which are nondirectional (and thus easiest to convert to HD-AM) or which have simple DAs, and/or represent the stations owned and operated by groups who invested heavily in iBiquity (including CC and CBS.)
Then there are the looming international implications. Canadian and Mexican stations, and their respective federal regulatory bodies, are not likely to sit passively over the border and allow IBOC nighttime screech wipe out their domestic AM service. Canada, in particular, relies on AM to serve widely-dispersed population in the northern interior of their country. Expect loud protests to the USDOS over NARBA violations.
Here in eastern Pennsylvania, within the 0.5 mV/m contour of WABC, WABC is now almost totally obliterated by WJR at nigh
A local station, WARM on 590 kHz, is receiving nighttime interference from the IBOC digital
This is progress? Fact: 30 kHz signals DO NOT BELONG in a band where the channels are only 10 kHz wide and skywave propagation is a fact of life.
This is what happens when we have an FCC that is dominated by lawyers and people beholden to lobbyists, rather than by engineers.
This is progress?
Fact: 30 kHz signals DO NOT BELONG in a band where the channels are only 10 kHz wide and skywave propagation is a fact of life. This is what happens when we have an FCC that is dominated by lawyers and people beholden to lobbyists, rather than by engineers.
Savage said:Cal cleverly chortled:
They're going to have to do a better marketing job before they can make (HD-AM) fly, don't you think?
See: above post for what KIND of "marketing job" would be necessary. Probably, threats of imminent demise at gunpoint would be the only thing that would be effective.
("I'm headed to the fridge for another beer," he said coldly.)
R.F. Burns said:So if IBOC is doomed as some in here have repeated many times, why not just go about your business and ignore it. After all, if there's no future for IBOC, why waste your time posting anti IBOC comments, here and elswhere.
R.F. Burns said:As long as we're paying homage to Cal, Savage Slyly Suggested,
Savage said:Cal cleverly chortled:
They're going to have to do a better marketing job before they can make (HD-AM) fly, don't you think?
See: above post for what KIND of "marketing job" would be necessary. Probably, threats of imminent demise at gunpoint would be the only thing that would be effective.
("I'm headed to the fridge for another beer," he said coldly.)
So if IBOC is doomed as some in here have repeated many times, why not just go about your business and ignore it. After all, if there's no future for IBOC, why waste your time posting anti IBOC comments, here and elswhere.
vsa said:R.F. Burns said:As long as we're paying homage to Cal, Savage Slyly Suggested,
Savage said:Cal cleverly chortled:
They're going to have to do a better marketing job before they can make (HD-AM) fly, don't you think?
See: above post for what KIND of "marketing job" would be necessary. Probably, threats of imminent demise at gunpoint would be the only thing that would be effective.
("I'm headed to the fridge for another beer," he said coldly.)
So if IBOC is doomed as some in here have repeated many times, why not just go about your business and ignore it. After all, if there's no future for IBOC, why waste your time posting anti IBOC comments, here and elswhere.
So if IBOC is so great as some in here have repeated many times, why not just go about your business and ignore its opponents. After all, if the future is IBOC, why waste your time posting pro IBOC comments, here and elswhere.
Savage said:R. F. rudely ruminated:
Why waste time posting anti-IBOC comments here or elswhere (sic) ?
Hmm. Why WOULD I keep campaigning against HD-AM? Because it could cost me $100 grand this winter. Tell you what, Mr. Burns. I'll split it with you. Send me $50 grand cash today, and I promise not to say anything more negative about IBOC until spring.
Besides, stirring up David Gleason is fun. He's the anti-IBOC crowd's secret weapon.
Savage said:R. F. rudely ruminated:
Why waste time posting anti-IBOC comments here or elswhere (sic) ?
Hmm. Why WOULD I keep campaigning against HD-AM? Because it could cost me $100 grand this winter. Tell you what, Mr. Burns. I'll split it with you. Send me $50 grand cash today, and I promise not to say anything more negative about IBOC until spring.
Besides, stirring up David Gleason is fun. He's the anti-IBOC crowd's secret weapon.
Savage said:Sure, happy to oblige! In your post you have branded me (twice) as "narrow-minded" (presumably because I publicly oppose an FCC-santioned science project that is likely to cost me tens of thousands of dollars), "paranoid" (earlier in the thread) and suggesting it would be productive to "shut off my transmitter" and broadcast only on the Internet. I guess in the Land Of Burns this is what passes for "respect" for radio professionals with whom you disagree.
So: taking a little etymological stroll through Webster's definitions of "rude"....we find, the word means any and all of:
1. Primitive, uncivilized; 2. lowly, humble (we'll concede this count of the indictment) 3. Lacking the graces of civilized life; 4. Formed without skill or precision; 5. Lively, robust; 6. Sudden and jarring (as in "a rude surprise.")
Various synonyms also appear to resonate: DISCOURTEOUS, ILL-MANNERED, IMPOLITE.
Rude also is a very applicable root word such as RUDERAL (growing in rubbish or poor soil, as in, 'IBOC was desperately cooked up by semicompetent radio industry suits in tandem with a ruderal development team headed by a third-rate electronics firm') and RUDESBY, an archaic middle-English term describing an ill-bred or nasty-tempered person.
Hope this helps!
SUPERCASTER said:HD Radio creates excessive additional new interference using several times the bandwidth and channels previously occupied by each station. To support HD radio is to support massive, useless amounts of additional interference virtually without benefit.
To support HD radio and claim to support less interference is contradictory and hypocritical.