Alan Fletcher said:
Ok, How many times do we have to say this?
Simple, again... (again???)
By switching off your stereo gen (thereby eliminating the 19Khz pilot) you will be able to increase deviation and eliminate both multipath distortion and mono blending (because to the average receiver you will always be mono). The drawback is all those people who get frustrated when they don't see "ST" lit up on their crappy radios... (how many of those are there anyway)
The answer is, YES! A RESOUNDING YES!!!!!! you will gain more effective coverage in mono-- somewhere on the order of 20-25 % depending on the terrain surrounding your TX Plant.
Why don't you just try it and find out??
"You don't say..."
" (He didn't say...)"
Har Dee Har Har...
-A
Because the stereo subcarrier is interleaved with the L+R, you do not get a significant modulation advantage by going mono (just the 8-10% from having no pilot).
As Alan and others have said, stereo increases the noise in the fringe-area reception versus mono-only. But it's not because of what you're transmitting, it's because the receiver is picking up something that you are NOT transmitting: noise. The stereo pilot is telling the receiver to decode whatever is in the signal's composite spectrum from just above 19 kHz to just below 57 kHz, and in low signal areas that spectrum will include a LOT of noise.
In actuality, since the stereo system uses a suppressed carrier, when there is no L-R going in to the stereo generator **there is no subcarrier or sidebands!** Zero. Zip. Zilch. Nada.
For all intents, the composite signal is then identical to a mono-only signal, with the obvious addition of the pilot. But you will still see peaks up to 100% with this mono signal, proving that because of interleaving, stereo does not significantly add to the peak level or compromise the mono signal's peak level.
Next time you have access to a spectrum analyzer, you can see this in action. Looking at the stereo composite spectrum, whenever an announcer speaks (a mono signal with no background music), the content in the subcarrier region will disappear entirely. At least it will if everything is adjusted properly!!
As for the station contemplating mono-only operation... You could always rig up something to detect L-R in your outgoing program signal to ramp on or off the stereo pilot as appropriate, keeping the clients happy should they require stereo for their commercials, but maintaining decent S/N during the bulk of the programming.
Keep in mind, however, that if you are using RBDS, you may need to keep the pilot on at all times for sync reference.
Kind Regards and Happy Holidays!
David Reaves
TransLanTech Sound, LLC
Home of the Award-Winning "Ariane Sequel Digital Audio Leveler"