R.F. Burns said:Pab Sungenis said:I still think that DAB would have a future in the US if anyone would just give it a chance. It's a better format, better sound quality, most of which come from no need for backwards compatibility (the main thrust behind IBOC).
When digital radio ws first considered in the United States two considerations were required by the FCC. First, because the commisskion would not assign any more spectrum for radio broadcasting the new system wold have to be compatible with existing analog transmissions and two, the system had to work on both AM & FM. IBOC in whatever form does do that. The European DAB does not. FM XTra doesn't work on AM and the Cam D system isn't FM compatible. Hope this helps explain why we are where we are.
Not so, RF... the FCC did not place any constraints on possible spectrum usage in the early days of digital radio. In the mid-90's, digital broadcast systems using L-band and S-band were evaluated in addition to IBOC, and the Commission did float the idea of reallocating some of the TV spectrum below 88 MHz to radio. However, after the NAB ended its brief flirtation with the Eureka DAB system and started lobbying hard (along with CBS, Clear Channel, et al) for IBOC, the FCC eventually fell into line and went along with them.
It was a consortium of big AM/FM owners that steered this ship to where it is today (some would say onto the rocks, but that depends on your POV).