I like that purple '53 Chevy.
You do know that Young Sheldon is a fictional TV show, not a documentary?Last night on "Young Sheldon" there was an amazingly realistic weather bulletin in a car. And the tornado showed up a few minutes later.
Maybe with unionized writers on strike, suits from the NAB are crossing the picket lines and inserting AM-friendly content into the scripts they and other strike-breakers churn out!You do know that Young Sheldon is a fictional TV show, not a documentary?
Actually was a bigger difference than that. The one and only new car I've ever owned was a '70 Dart Swinger, bought the year I graduated college (nice car...318 V8 with stick shift. If you kept your foot out of it gas mileage was in the 22-23 mpg range). Don't recall what an AM only radio cost, but an AM-FM radio was an almost $300 option. On a car with a list price of around $2500!There used to be significant pricing differences in the 60s and 70s. An AM radio might be $65, where an AM/FM could be $130.
Depended entirely on the manufacturer and whether the AM/FM unit was mono or stereo. I’ll try to pull some option/price lists for Ford, GM and Chrysler for 1970 in the next day or two.Actually was a bigger difference than that. The one and only new car I've ever owned was a '70 Dart Swinger, bought the year I graduated college (nice car...318 V8 with stick shift. If you kept your foot out of it gas mileage was in the 22-23 mpg range). Don't recall what an AM only radio cost, but an AM-FM radio was an almost $300 option. On a car with a list price of around $2500!
Needless to say, I skipped the FM (not much worth listening to on FM in 1970 anyway). Turns out it was a good decision. Several years later I got a factory AM-FM radio at a junkyard for $10 or so. FM section was deaf as a stump, and didn't have very good AFC so it drifted. A lot.
And that's why I was surprised at how realistic they made it.You do know that Young Sheldon is a fictional TV show, not a documentary?
Maybe with unionized writers on strike, suits from the NAB are crossing the picket lines and inserting AM-friendly content into the scripts they and other strike-breakers churn out!
I second that emotion!So I honestly can do without AM since there is almost never anything I want to hear there.
They don't turn over episodes that quicklyAnd that's why I was surprised at how realistic they made it.
The episode was surely written before the strike.
I thought it was obvious that the original post about NAB people doctoring the scripts was tongue-in-cheek. Or tongue-in-keyboard as the case may be.The episode was surely written before the strike.
Young Sheldon-TV show, realistic? Come on Chimp, you're messing with us?And that's why I was surprised at how realistic they made it.
The federal government is tasked with promoting public safety, public health. and the well-being of the American people. That is why, over the years, they have mandated tail lights on vehicles, windshield safety glass, airbags, seat belts, catalytic converters, engines that burn unleaded gasoline, and other environmental and safety factors.I'm curious. If Congress does pass a law requiring AM radios to be installed in new cars, how long do they think that should continue? Another 20 years? 50? 100?
But even if true, that means to an auto manufacturer, more cost for something that few potential customers care about? Giving customers what they want, and avoiding things that customers don't want, builds a positive customer experience. It also helps reduce manufacturing costs.
Fujitsu Ten had apparently solved many of the interference problems with AM radio reception ~30 years ago, their tech could certainly be implemented in a new low cost (low power too) AM receiver IC.
Even though I'm in the business; personally I don't want the government to even consider using any taxpayer dollars for keeping derelict AM stations alive in the very remote chance that these stations would be staffed during an emergency. That, and if the majority of consumers under 70 never would even consider turning to AM radio in an emergency, talk about a-'tree falling in the woods' scenario.I also think that the unique characteristics of the frequency range currently used by AM radio should continue to be used for AM radio, maybe partially Government subsidized (justified for public safety) to keep several 50kW omni Day&Night AMs OTA throughout the USA.
The problem in the USA is not radio sets, it is radio signals.Fujitsu Ten had apparently solved many of the interference problems with AM radio reception ~30 years ago, their tech could certainly be implemented in a new low cost (low power too) AM receiver IC.
Fujitsu Ten had apparently solved many of the interference problems with AM radio reception ~30 years ago, their tech could certainly be implemented in a new low cost (low power too) AM receiver IC.
If you heard the weather bulletin I think you'd agree with me.Young Sheldon-TV show, realistic? Come on Chimp, you're messing with us?
OK, but in a SHTF scenario, there will be no electricity, and -- consequently -- no interference.The problem in the USA is not radio sets, it is radio signals.
I've mentioned this about 80 times already, but... there are only about 180 AM stations in the top 100 US market that cover at least 80% of the market population day and night. There are some markets that have none, and a few like New York City, Chicago and Los Angles that have 5 or 6... but those are exceptions.
So, if you build it (those imaginary radios), they won't come. The AM signals are further reduced in reach by ever-greater interference from today's electronics.