At the heart of of the criticism of HD radio is its poor reception. I've had an HD receiver since shortly after the technology became available, and heartily agree that receiving stations in HD can be an exercise in frustration.
I'm in the New York area, which has lacked a regular country music station for many years. WLTW HD2 carries the Country Road stream from Clear Channel, which I believe is well programmed, and has good dj's. But it had the usual awful HD reception, and was down for several months this summer.
The HD2, called New York Country, returned about a week ago, and immediately I noticed a huge difference in the reception. It is now rock solid indoors, at my listening location. More significantly, it now works quite well mobile, and I enjoy it. As I travel about the area, dropouts are infrequent, and usually last only a few seconds. The power must have been boosted. I believe that an online stream from a smartphone would have at least as many dropouts during a trip, and unlike the HD signal, is not free.
Adding power to the weak signals seems to be a good initial step. I've also read that there are other technological enhancements being developed. So I would keep an open mind on the future of HD radio, and would not be as quick as some to condemn it to the scrap heap.
I'm in the New York area, which has lacked a regular country music station for many years. WLTW HD2 carries the Country Road stream from Clear Channel, which I believe is well programmed, and has good dj's. But it had the usual awful HD reception, and was down for several months this summer.
The HD2, called New York Country, returned about a week ago, and immediately I noticed a huge difference in the reception. It is now rock solid indoors, at my listening location. More significantly, it now works quite well mobile, and I enjoy it. As I travel about the area, dropouts are infrequent, and usually last only a few seconds. The power must have been boosted. I believe that an online stream from a smartphone would have at least as many dropouts during a trip, and unlike the HD signal, is not free.
Adding power to the weak signals seems to be a good initial step. I've also read that there are other technological enhancements being developed. So I would keep an open mind on the future of HD radio, and would not be as quick as some to condemn it to the scrap heap.