The British government has delayed for about half a decade at least the closure of analog broadcast radio... AM and FM.
The reasoning is that many don't have DAB receivers and many in rural areas as well as in urban ones with irregular terrain just can't get reliable, if any, DAB signals.
A friend and www.worldradiohistory.com collaborator in the UK wrote this to me and gave me permission to share:
Some years ago, "experts" expressed an interest in stopping all MW transmissions in the UK and handing over the band to mobile radio companies to use for extra local channels. However, the experts have obviously never listened on MW in the winter months when reception conditions enable stations hundreds of miles away to be received. There has also been criticism of the sound quality of DAB transmissions, with the audio frequency range being compressed in order to pack more stations in to the multiplex. There have been many complaints that DAB coverage is very patchy in remote parts of the country. Battery-operated DAB sets are very hungry for batteries, compared with the long battery lives of AM and FM sets.
The people who want us to throw away old-technology radio receivers have not considered what would happen if the internet went down or the electricity grid was compromised and all the "new" short-range radio devices stopped working and the government wanted to send alerts and information to the general public. I am not talking about a nuclear attack but rather a series of extreme weather events. It is true that a handful of MW radio transmitters scattered across the country would enable everyone to receive those transmissions on simple hand-cranked or battery-operated receivers.
I find the observation about how digital radios eat batteries alive to be very critical. We no longer have useful battery operated TV sets as the few that are available are rechargeable, not disposable battery operated. That means that in an emergency one could watch for a few hours during a power failure and then... nothing.
The reasoning is that many don't have DAB receivers and many in rural areas as well as in urban ones with irregular terrain just can't get reliable, if any, DAB signals.
A friend and www.worldradiohistory.com collaborator in the UK wrote this to me and gave me permission to share:
Some years ago, "experts" expressed an interest in stopping all MW transmissions in the UK and handing over the band to mobile radio companies to use for extra local channels. However, the experts have obviously never listened on MW in the winter months when reception conditions enable stations hundreds of miles away to be received. There has also been criticism of the sound quality of DAB transmissions, with the audio frequency range being compressed in order to pack more stations in to the multiplex. There have been many complaints that DAB coverage is very patchy in remote parts of the country. Battery-operated DAB sets are very hungry for batteries, compared with the long battery lives of AM and FM sets.
The people who want us to throw away old-technology radio receivers have not considered what would happen if the internet went down or the electricity grid was compromised and all the "new" short-range radio devices stopped working and the government wanted to send alerts and information to the general public. I am not talking about a nuclear attack but rather a series of extreme weather events. It is true that a handful of MW radio transmitters scattered across the country would enable everyone to receive those transmissions on simple hand-cranked or battery-operated receivers.
I find the observation about how digital radios eat batteries alive to be very critical. We no longer have useful battery operated TV sets as the few that are available are rechargeable, not disposable battery operated. That means that in an emergency one could watch for a few hours during a power failure and then... nothing.