The comparison is unqualified. I listened to both in the 60's. The reverb and compressor may have been the same as they used, but
I know both sounded much BIGGER than the sample clips in the YouTube videos.
Did the audio in the youtubes even HAVE the ability to go over 100% modulation?
It's hard to sound huge without aysmmetric mod over 100%.
Perhaps a little less drive into the compressor would make it less squashed.
I did find some issues with "soundstage changes" due to compression in the audio of WLS and WCFL, but there weren't any stations that did not have this issue.
RADIO TRUTH said:The comparison is unqualified. I listened to both in the 60's. The reverb and compressor may have been the same as they used, but
I know both sounded much BIGGER than the sample clips in the YouTube videos.
Did the audio in the youtubes even HAVE the ability to go over 100% modulation?
It's hard to sound huge without aysmmetric mod over 100%.
Perhaps a little less drive into the compressor would make it less squashed.
I did find some issues with "soundstage changes" due to compression in the audio of WLS and WCFL, but there weren't any stations that did not have this issue.
When I said that mid 60s WCFL and WLS had flat, dead audio processing with little compression and no reverb, this was in comparison to many other top forty stations at the same time who had an EMT 140 plate reverb and used much more compression with a Fairchild 660 compressor for much denser audio. Chicago radio audio processing in the mid 60s always sounded flater, deader and blander than many other markets at the same time. The statement was made to show a comparison between such stations as WABC, WMCA, WQAM and others around the country versus WCFL and WLS. This is particularly interesting because both WABC and WLS were ABC o & o's and WABC's mid 60s audio was so much denser than WLS. I visited WCFL in 1967 and had a conversation with their chief engineer, Jim Loupas about this very topic.
And this topic is dear to my heart, as I experiment with loud vs BIG in my own Pt 15 AM. You can't just be loud. You have to leave enough room to
sound big "in". That is why "optimal density" is anyone's guess or preference. I believe the "less processing" they were "guilty of" allowed the wham, thud, and punch of the music to come right through, and the plate-modulated rigs running +150% mod allowed the listener to hear that punch on
radios of the day with passive diode detection. The same less/more treacherous line is also seen in use of reverb, where too much is too much, and
if you're "too loud", there's no room left to hear the reverb in. The trick is to not leave any room left in the modulation envelope, but to fool the ear into making it think you did.
I think the WABC had too much reverb, the West coast didn't like it at all, here in Chicago it was done "just right".
You didnt NEED to buy a car reverb here in the 60's and 70's. The station did it for you.
And when done right, with room for the punch, and the right level of reverb, it sounds gigantic at any volume level.
Not just loud, but huge sounding, and there's a big difference.
I doubt we'd be arguing, if we're both trying to bring the huge fat sound to AM.
I'm pretty happy with 192 k files through Breakaway Broadcast Processor, followed by an ART Pro VLA in two passes of the mono signal.
Breakaway gives me very satisfying multiband AGC, and the VLA makes the audio "wet" .
The audio to the reverb (on a side chain) does not get the VLA, uses a long Hammond spring, and feeds into a separate input of the
class A triode tube modulator. There the two audio signals mix and get passed onto the actual modulator tube.
There's no iron anywhere, the 150% asymmetric mod of Breakaway combined with the class A and the overcapacity built into the design makes it sound like anything but 100mw. I'm trying to sound like WLS and WCFL did on hot summer nights in 1970 or so.
When I listen to my signal a few blocks away at night, and the Troggs sing "I Can't Control Myself", it gives me shivers. That's good.
Good enough that I'm not sure if I want to go to the trouble of building a plate reverb.
I'd love to hear more of your processing experiments, hopefully some recorded from an actual radio.