Hey everyone,
I recently had the opportunity to borrow a car with an HD radio receiver. Obviously I’m extremely late to the party on this one, but I thought I’d share a few thoughts that I had.
Positives:
1. The addition of HD sub-channels was an interesting experience. I didn’t find myself listening to these channels often, but the fact that they’re there at all is a nice feature. It seems like these sub channels are a great place to migrate the programming that may be too niche for regular broadcast radio. With that being said, it looks like broadcasters have already been treating those sub channels as a place for niche programming.
2. The information displayed about the song, artist, and station is nice touch. Obviously a lot of this can be accomplished with RDS, but it’s not a bad thing to have.
3. When HD is locked in, the audio quality does sound very good.
Negatives:
1. Signal strength is a problem. Much like DTV, it’s an all or nothing situation. I found that most of the HD signals didn’t lock in (and stay locked in) unless the conditions were favourable (good LOS to the tower, nothing in the way). I’m not really sure that I see someone using an HD-2 or HD-3 for casual listening all that much if the signal constantly drops out.
2. Sticking with signal strength, I noticed that the radio switched from HD to analog pretty frequently. If the HD and analog signal are synched up well, it shouldn’t be all that notable, however, I definitely noticed it. If I had HD radio in my personal vehicle, I’d probably turn it off just to prevent the constant switching back and fourth from happening.
3. Audio quality. I mentioned earlier that HD radio sounds good, but it’s definitely not significantly better than what you get with regular FM. I think analog FM would need to sound a bit like AM for me to prefer HD (where you’d have to deal with dropouts, but would get significantly better audio quality).
Overall, I’m glad I finally got to try it. However, I agree with some of the broadcast engineers I’d talked to over the years (who have told me that HD radio is more of a fun experiment as opposed to the future of radio).
Feel free to discuss.
I recently had the opportunity to borrow a car with an HD radio receiver. Obviously I’m extremely late to the party on this one, but I thought I’d share a few thoughts that I had.
Positives:
1. The addition of HD sub-channels was an interesting experience. I didn’t find myself listening to these channels often, but the fact that they’re there at all is a nice feature. It seems like these sub channels are a great place to migrate the programming that may be too niche for regular broadcast radio. With that being said, it looks like broadcasters have already been treating those sub channels as a place for niche programming.
2. The information displayed about the song, artist, and station is nice touch. Obviously a lot of this can be accomplished with RDS, but it’s not a bad thing to have.
3. When HD is locked in, the audio quality does sound very good.
Negatives:
1. Signal strength is a problem. Much like DTV, it’s an all or nothing situation. I found that most of the HD signals didn’t lock in (and stay locked in) unless the conditions were favourable (good LOS to the tower, nothing in the way). I’m not really sure that I see someone using an HD-2 or HD-3 for casual listening all that much if the signal constantly drops out.
2. Sticking with signal strength, I noticed that the radio switched from HD to analog pretty frequently. If the HD and analog signal are synched up well, it shouldn’t be all that notable, however, I definitely noticed it. If I had HD radio in my personal vehicle, I’d probably turn it off just to prevent the constant switching back and fourth from happening.
3. Audio quality. I mentioned earlier that HD radio sounds good, but it’s definitely not significantly better than what you get with regular FM. I think analog FM would need to sound a bit like AM for me to prefer HD (where you’d have to deal with dropouts, but would get significantly better audio quality).
Overall, I’m glad I finally got to try it. However, I agree with some of the broadcast engineers I’d talked to over the years (who have told me that HD radio is more of a fun experiment as opposed to the future of radio).
Feel free to discuss.