I really don't like it..I know it won't happen ASAP, Maybe for another 5 years
But, it will come
All these AM Radios going to be useless
But, it will come
All these AM Radios going to be useless
If you want to hear the all-digital station, just get a Sangean HD AM radio for $100 or less, and then keep the analog radios for the rest of them.
There's still a listener base on AM, Not much
People still listen to the News, Sports Games on AM
I don't think they can fix Interference or even Skywave
If the digital AM can feed a translator, it has a way to stay viable while the number of HD AM radios in cars increase. Then the trick is to get the listeners back to the AM signal.
It's not stations and clients driving this bus. It is listeners, who have all but abandoned AM radio in many markets. There is only one commercially operated AM in my market which is not paired with an FM translator, and it had a 2.4 share in the last ratings book. Now surely some of the listening to the with-translator AM stations is still via Ancient Modulation, but probably not a lot.Always seems funny to me that stations and clients prefer a 99 watt FM translator, over a 10, 25 or even 50 KW medium-wave (Aka, "AM") station.
As for interference, if the FCC (and others) began a concentrated effort to fix the RFI problem, we might make some real headway. It might take a few years, but getting the noise-makers out of the pipeline now, and keeping them out while the old, non-compliant fails or burns up, would be a worthwhile goal.
That's the whole point as to why this is a viable option now. There are AM stations that have virtually their entire audience listening to their translator. Why not shut down the analog AM and switch it to all digital to expand coverage and improve the overall sound, while retaining the translator? Also, any HD radio that can receive AM can also receive it in full digital.If the digital AM can feed a translator, it has a way to stay viable while the number of HD AM radios in cars increase. Then the trick is to get the listeners back to the AM signal.
Also, any HD radio that can receive AM can also receive it in full digital.
Are you saying that the vast majority of HD radios don't include AM, because the total I just read was over 50 million on the road?Owned by a small percentage of the population. One optimistic estimate was around a million.
Are you saying that the vast majority of HD radios don't include AM, because the total I just read was over 50 million on the road?
That doesn’t work so well for people driving around in cars. I don’t really see a need for AM radio stations to convert to all-digital when 99.99% of people listening to AM stations listen to the analog broadcast anyway.