jras20 said:
I took a video last night of this. I am 30 miles from KVET in Austin. During the tripo skip last night, check it out the KVET HD Signal just wouldnt lock. And the SSI signal was great at 17-18. I think we need to work on this. I'm using HD more and more now. I'm working on it out in my place in Lavaca county.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VqOXd1yz3D0
The tropo skip across the Gulf has been incredible the last few days. You are close enough to the coast to get some effect, I'm even seeing some effect here in Dallas.
This does highlight the idiocy of using adjacent channels for IBOC sidebands. Any analog signal there at all destroys HD lock. That is why it doesn't work on AM, even if there isn't a first adjacent there in daytime, it is sure to be there at night or at least there will be noise there.
It also illustrates why it is foolish to try to resolve the problem by increasing the power. The present sideband levels don't tropo skip very well. Once you get a tenfold increase in power, tropo skips are going to mutually jam HD FM stations around the country.
It is an interesting idea, just the technical details that were poorly done.
Here is my proposal to save HD radio:
(1) Move the FM sidebands to within the existing 200 kHz channel allotment, displacing any subcarrier services other than analog stereo. There is plenty of room if you get rid of SCA, RDS, reading for the deaf, and all that other stuff. It is done better with HD: HD-2, etc., data capability, etc. Once the sidebands are off adjacent frequencies, tropo skip helps HD - not hurts it. And all adjacent channel interference complaints are resolved. Narrower channels mean more gain and less noise due to the gain / bandwidth limitation of receivers, so range and building penetration will increase. Win win scenarios all around, except for a very tiny minority of listeners using existing subcarrier services, who could be subsidized to buy new receivers.
(2) Abandon the IBOC system presently in place, replace with AMAX standards, and have the FCC mandate AMAX including stereo on all receivers costing over $50. C-Quam stereo is very robust, has good range, good building penetration, works at night, sounds great. Most consumers have never heard of it so wouldn't be the wiser, most HD receivers sold to date already decode it in some fashion - and future receivers could be made to do the job better. AM sounds great again on regular radios, the self jamming problem is mitigated on cheap AM radios with broad IF bandwidth, there are no adjacent channel problems. Win win for everybody.