Here's one for you. We have a station in East Texas (KXAL) that broadcasts on 100.3 in analog. In the Dallas area, there is also a station (KJKK) that is co-channeled with it, but it is running HD. If you listen on an HD radio, in the early morning when the skip comes rolling in - it does that a lot here in East Texas - the Dallas HD signal sometimes over-rides the analog signal, even though the local analog signal still comes in fine on an analog only radio.
This observation was pointed out to me by a local listener, using a Sony HD tuner. When you first tune in the station, the radio immediately locks onto the local analog signal, which seems to come in fine. After a few seconds the tuner automatically switches to the Dallas station's HD stream. This is not good. The local transmitter is about 8 miles from the listener's home, which is well within the stations protected contour. It seems to happen with quite a bit of regularity, so I don't think it is an isolated instance.
If this isn't "interference," I'm not sure what is. If and when the FCC approves a 10 db power increase for HD, this phenomenon will become much more prevalent. The only good news I see is there aren't many HD radios in the area to be bothered.
This observation was pointed out to me by a local listener, using a Sony HD tuner. When you first tune in the station, the radio immediately locks onto the local analog signal, which seems to come in fine. After a few seconds the tuner automatically switches to the Dallas station's HD stream. This is not good. The local transmitter is about 8 miles from the listener's home, which is well within the stations protected contour. It seems to happen with quite a bit of regularity, so I don't think it is an isolated instance.
If this isn't "interference," I'm not sure what is. If and when the FCC approves a 10 db power increase for HD, this phenomenon will become much more prevalent. The only good news I see is there aren't many HD radios in the area to be bothered.