I've got some excellent evidence of what FM IBOC does to an adjacent signal. Saturday night, I happened to catch several Boston stations with their IBOC off.
I was recoding 100.5 WRCH during the time that 100.7 WZLX turned theirs off. Can you tell when the IBOC went off?
http://home.comcast.net/~n1zzn/1005.mp3
I had on 97.1 WQHT when 96.9 WTKK turned theirs back on
http://home.comcast.net/~n1zzn/971.mp3
There was some enhancement that night, but you should still see what it's like when IBOC trashes a strong adjacent station. There are many cases around here, like with 92.3 WPRO/92.5 WXRV, 101.5 WWBB/101.7 WFNX, where this has affected local reception. I know it's not going to do any good at this point, I argued it for way too long. Just figured I'd share the audio of proof of what IBOC hash sounds like. Some of you have continued to post that there is no hash at all, well you are wrong!
I was recoding 100.5 WRCH during the time that 100.7 WZLX turned theirs off. Can you tell when the IBOC went off?
http://home.comcast.net/~n1zzn/1005.mp3
I had on 97.1 WQHT when 96.9 WTKK turned theirs back on
http://home.comcast.net/~n1zzn/971.mp3
There was some enhancement that night, but you should still see what it's like when IBOC trashes a strong adjacent station. There are many cases around here, like with 92.3 WPRO/92.5 WXRV, 101.5 WWBB/101.7 WFNX, where this has affected local reception. I know it's not going to do any good at this point, I argued it for way too long. Just figured I'd share the audio of proof of what IBOC hash sounds like. Some of you have continued to post that there is no hash at all, well you are wrong!