Chuck said:Yes, but I'll bet the analog signal is useful for 80-90 miles with that power and HAAT. Since most FM coverage is circular (Yes I know Pensacola is on the coast so a lot of coverage is wasted) you are losing a lot of coverage with HD.
Circles are amazing things. Sixth grade math will tell you that area equals pi (3.414) times the radius squared. So a 45 mile radius is about 6913 square miles. 80 miles radius equals a bit more than 21,849 square miles. That is a HUGE difference in coverage. Do you really want to pay money to throw that away? Just wondering....
They're not throwing anything away since the HD drops out back to analog. I look at the subchannels as being little class A's riding on the coattails of the class C's. Until the digital power is increased (which won't happen due to short sighted installations limited to 1%) there won't be parity with the analog.
The question I have for you, as an FM broadcaster, is who 80-100 miles out would you be advertising to? Sure it's nice to carry "my favorite station" across eight counties but people in Biloxi have their own market & stations and people in Fort Walton Beach have their own market & stations.
Hell, Mobile and Pensacola pretty much get all the same stations but they're two different markets and each station "plays" to one or the other and usually doesn't carry ads outside their claimed market. WKSJ is Mobile, WXBM and WYCT are Pensacola but we get all of them anywhere. If you ask me, that's more wasted power than HD is putting out, by far.
I certainly don't want my choice reduced but the reality is most listening is done within that 60/54 dBu contour so why worry about who can or can't get HD outside it right now?