OKCRadioGuy said:
Stations should have to demonstrate they won't cause harmful interference via individual studies on a case by case basis. A shortcut of allowing a across the board increase is a very horrible idea. In some cases increasing only one side may be the right thing to do. In some cases even the current iboc level is actually too much. If the big boys want to upgrade then spend a bit more and do a study. I am dead against a set limit that is just an arbitrary number. Bad bad idea!
My sentiment is that this whole FM IBOC implementation was always a bad idea! Here's my reasoning.
1. The listener experience of adjacent channel interference. That means noise and inconsistency when there had never been any before. FM analog listening becomes less enjoyable.
2. The listener is told he has to buy an new radio at a time when a trip to the radio store will present him with satellite radio, Internet streaming media players, MP3 players for car, home and body and some new cellular phones that may seem like better purchases listening.
3. The listener who buys the IBOC radio finds that changing channels now takes several seconds but his MP3s and CDs start right up when the button is pushed. FM listening becomes less immediate and perhaps with an new annoyance associated for him.
4. The mobile IBOC listener now has to hear his radio cross fade to and from analog when ever the signal becomes marginal. I've only listened to the New York City and some New Jersey FM IBOC stations. But I've heard level jumps, some brief spacey flanging effects due to small time offsets and some significant shifts of the processing character. There was one station that didn't use a delay on the analog and so the program would jump ahead and back in time. The cross fade is a definite annoyance that becomes part of the FM listening experience.
5. The sound quality is certainly not any better. Un-rate reduced 20Hz - 15 kHz audio will always sound better than 20Hz - 20 kHz that has been rate reduced to 92kbps. It would require a rate of well over 400kbps before the damage goes away. My T1 lines that send full quality audio use over 1400kbps. Now how about those MP3's that we have to play on the air because the record companies insist on pointing our program directors to their new download sites to get new releases. I'm not kidding. Cascade the MP3 music or the MP3 agency spots with the new IBOC rate reduction and it really becomes bad. But that's what is happening now. Some stations even use rate reduced STL and or rate reduced satellite programming in the sequence. These digital "compression" algorithms were not created to cascaded like that for good reason. The result is not very engaging.
Shame on the ones that tout IBOC as "High Definition" and "CD quality". They are simply lying. Shame on the record companies for pushing MP3s on radio stations. Shame on the ad agencies for delivering commercials that sound terribly strident. Compromises and more compromises that marginalize the listening experience. There are plenty of people that say they can't hear differences. How about a chef that can't taste the subtleties of his cooking ingredients. Should we keep visiting his restaurant? Maybe we're impressed with it's atmosphere and haven't found a better experience. Posing radio as the metaphorical restaurant; shouldn't we be paying closer attention to the quality of the food?
This is my personal view only. It's not intended to be associated with employer or any organization.
Ahhh.... I feel better now!