I imagine that the Delco radio engineers (I actually met a couple of the retired ones, though they weren't still in Kokomo) spent time in Indianapolis testing particular problems like that.
The AFC tuned really wide on strong signals on our Magnavox Stereo Theater. Weak signals were fairly well separated, but you had to turn the volume up near the top to get a decent listening level. I could get signals 45-60 miles away on the folded dipole turnstile at 27 feet, WKNR-FM, WXYZ-FM, CKLW-FM from the old Riverside Drive TL, over the terrain ridge, but only with the volume cranked all the way up.
I could get both WJR-FM 96.3 and WBCM-FM 96.1, short spaced since the 1960s. They agreed (today the stations are both owned by Cumulus, and operate at maximum (WDVD 96.3) and close to maximum C0, but just a little over C1 height, for WHNN 96.1). IBOC on WDVD does limit WHNN's coverage though.
The AFC tuned really wide on strong signals on our Magnavox Stereo Theater. Weak signals were fairly well separated, but you had to turn the volume up near the top to get a decent listening level. I could get signals 45-60 miles away on the folded dipole turnstile at 27 feet, WKNR-FM, WXYZ-FM, CKLW-FM from the old Riverside Drive TL, over the terrain ridge, but only with the volume cranked all the way up.
I could get both WJR-FM 96.3 and WBCM-FM 96.1, short spaced since the 1960s. They agreed (today the stations are both owned by Cumulus, and operate at maximum (WDVD 96.3) and close to maximum C0, but just a little over C1 height, for WHNN 96.1). IBOC on WDVD does limit WHNN's coverage though.
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