Sorry - I should have explained that in Pure Digital Mode on the Medium Wave
band, most of the Digital power would then be within the 10kHz bandwidth, not
on the sidebands as it is now in Hybrid-Digital. No wonder one could get alarmed
that a station with 5kW Digital Power on its sidebands would obliterate any other
station for hundreds and hundreds of miles (if not more) - of course it would!
Check this article out -
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HD_Radio
I think what the author(s) are stating in the above referenced article is entirely
possible, though the codecs need to be improved even further in order to derive
decent sounding audio an average 30k bit rate! At the present time 30kb audio
only sounds adequate - and I mean anywhere: internet streaming, satellite radio
or Hybrid Digital terrestrial radio. Give it time - 30kbits now sounds a lot better
now than it did even 5 years ago!
"When operating in
pure digital mode, the AM-HD Radio signal fits
inside a standard 10 kHz channel (20-40 kbit/s) or an extended 20 kHz
channel (40-60 kbit/s), at the discretion of the station manager.[8]"
see iBiquity Digital Corporation - IBOC White Papers
http://www.ibiquity.com/broadcasters/quality_implementation/iboc_white_papers
However, AM HD Radio signal in full digital mode is 15dB (32 times)
higher in digital power compared to that in hybrid digital mode and
coverage is expected to approximate the previous analog coverage.
32 times the power of Hybrid 32 * 500 watts = 16,000 watts
(so my idea of 5kW Full Digital instead of 50KW Analog was a conservative
estimate; 5kW would be a 10 fold, or 10dB increase) My guess is that
improved receiver sensitivity and selectivity and the transmitting channel
confined to a standard bandwidth of 10KHz would be helpful in reducing
interference.
If almost all of the digital energy is confined to a 10kHz bandwidth, then
there would be little to no interference to a station 10 kHz away from the
"offending" station. But that is only going to be possible on a full digital
signal, of course!
rbrucecarter5 said:
stormy01 said:
That would be nice, however, with the number of stations on the air, the FCC is unlikely
to allow a larger footprint in digital than in analog (think: market service area)...the current
50kW AM stations will probably be allowed no more than 5kW
If the current sidebands on AM are the same as FM - 1/100 the power - then 5kW would be a tremendous power increase for AM! What astonishes me is how 50kW / 100 = 500 W, yet those sidebands go 1000 miles in the daytime! Even in a noisy area like Dallas, WOAI sidebands are much louder than WOAI analog - at only 500W! Put 5 kW on those sidebands and local 1190 goes bye-bye during the daytime. WOAI full digital, even at only 5 kW, will be audible coast to coast. All other 1200's - jammed.