I'm not addressing all the responses individually, and I did misrepresent the 2035 end date for certain areas (markets) from many new ICE-powered vehicles.
At -some- point (2045 and beyond...) that listening audience won't be there. Will it go away because people just won't be listening to 'broadcast radio' as much as they did back in the early 2020's, because the vehicles they are buying will not have the capability of listening?
The whole thread topic is about AM existing in vehicles, where the industry pro's of this forum (like yourself...) tell us is a significant chunk of the current listening audience.Here are the electric vehicles without AM radio:
All Tesla models, two Mercedes-Benz EVs, two BMW EVs, the Porsche Taycan, Audi e-Tron, VW ID.4, all new Volvos.
That's it. And every one of those is a decidedly low-volume car. Tesla is the only American manufacturer to suggest that interference makes AM untenable in an electric car. Every other American maker of an EV (and every Asian maker) makes it work just fine. The European brands are backing out because the AM band is nearing extinction in their home countries. On higher-volume vehicles, they can budget for AM-capable receivers in North America and another receiver for Europe, but again, these are small-volume vehicles.
As for 2035, that's the date California has mandated the end of sales of new gasoline or diesel-powered vehicles, with the exception of plug-in hybrids that deliver 50 miles of range on a charge and have a gasoline-powered engine and a fuel tank.
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At -some- point (2045 and beyond...) that listening audience won't be there. Will it go away because people just won't be listening to 'broadcast radio' as much as they did back in the early 2020's, because the vehicles they are buying will not have the capability of listening?