AFAIK, 94.3 and 94.7 can't be used at all in the KC area.
I think your 94.7 and 94.9 signals might overlap.
AFAIK, 94.3 and 94.7 can't be used at all in the KC area.
IIRC, Analog FM + HD Radio still fit in an FM channel
It seems to me that using just the HD Radio carriers would allow more stations
I like tech just for the sake of tech, hence my moderate interest in HD Radio.
I guess the impetus now will be to develop a very low data rate (monophonic), moderate bandwidth (maybe to 10kHz or 12kHz) audio codec so that even more streamers can listen to acceptable sounding audio (at least on their smartphone speakers) on existing cell phone networks without overloading them.
Kirk Bayne
I guess the impetus now will be to develop a very low data rate (monophonic), moderate bandwidth (maybe to 10kHz or 12kHz) audio codec so that even more streamers can listen to acceptable sounding audio (at least on their smartphone speakers) on existing cell phone networks without overloading them.
Right now no one's buying cars either, so the prognostication of HD disappearing and FM being buried in a submenu somewhere is a little premature.It doesn't matter. After all these years virtually no one listens to the HD Radio subchannels as it is. Broadcasters have been turning them off, not clamoring to add more.
All the development in the past 10 years is with wireless 4G/5G connectivity, streaming, smart devices and apps. No one is buying radios at all, never mind HD Radios. Your next new car will probably have in-dash streaming apps font and center, FM radio buried in a sub-menu, HD Radio disabled by default and AM radio removed altogether.
The cell networks won't be overloaded by users playing audio at normal bitrates, like 64-128 kbps. Audio codecs are getting more efficient so that quality shouldn't have to be compromised. Stereo is best as many smartphones/tablets/PCs have stereo speakers. Streaming shouldn't just sound acceptable, it should be at least as good as the best quality FM radio sound.I guess the impetus now will be to develop a very low data rate (monophonic), moderate bandwidth (maybe to 10kHz or 12kHz) audio codec so that even more streamers can listen to acceptable sounding audio (at least on their smartphone speakers) on existing cell phone networks without overloading them.
Those days are gone too. 3G has been turned off and 4G is now the entry level for data speed. Most people have unlimited data plans and are not concerned with reducing audio bandwidth. Low quality audio already sunk AM radio, today's streamers aren't going to repeat that mistake.
It could work but the FCC bases its spacing requirements on radios from the 1960s which had horrible adj channel rejection...in Austin, 93.3 was a Class C move-in that is only 400khz away from other Class Cs...the 93.3 signal is less than 35 miles from the other Cs where normally it should be 65+ miles...it moved in before the current rules were adopted and granted a waiver under grandfathering.. there is NO interference whatsoeverI think your 94.7 and 94.9 signals might overlap.
And much of the world allows second adjacents in the same market. It is not a problem, and never has been even going back to the 60's when I built a bunch of FMs in South America.It could work but the FCC bases its spacing requirements on radios from the 1960s which had horrible adj channel rejection...in Austin, 93.3 was a Class C move-in that is only 400khz away from other Class Cs...the 93.3 signal is less than 35 miles from the other Cs where normally it should be 65+ miles...it moved in before the current rules were adopted and granted a waiver under grandfathering.. there is NO interference whatsoever
Sone of what you're describing sounds like the "FMeXtra" standard in the early 2000's, which was built to run inside the FM carrier the same way RDS does. I wish that FMX had a better run, honestly.Hi-Fi and low data rate audio codec(s) = good enough for mono smartphone speakers and it minimizes cell phone network usage (Higher Fidelity stereo [or in a perfect world - discrete quadraphonic] audio codecs could be offered for a higher price for streaming users concerned about getting very high fidelity audio).
On the HD Radio digital carriers only (just the ones that would be used if there was an analog FM signal too) issue, I was thinking along the lines of a type is signal that wouldn't be FM and would (probably) be ignored by the vast population of FM radios yet use existing tech.
If all HD Radios could tune in the even FM frequencies, then the low power HD Radio carriers placed around even frequencies should be far enough away from other FM signals (local and nearby markets) to not interfere.
Kirk Bayne
The problem with Kirk's sketch is that it assumes the HD carriers occupy less bandwidth than they actually do. I can't find a real link on the NRSC website, but if you do a search for "nrsc 1026sf" you'll get a link to the pdf. Page 8 of that PDF details what an all-digital FM spectrum would look like. As you can see, despite the fact that HD radio is touted as "in band, on channel" it is actually "in band, adjacent channel". In Kirk's proposal, the HD carrier of the 94.7 signal would drown out KCMO and the HD carrier of the 94.3 signal would drown out KFKF.Is anyone else just flat-out confused at this point? Although, I think Kirk's "sketch" helped me out here, and the idea does have some good concepts to borrow, I'm still not entirely sure how, in today's FM band, this wouldn't congest the band further. I'm all ears, though.