Could it actually be that WBZ-AM has finally thrown in the IBOC towel? P=)
They have been turning it off at night for the past few years, to protect (then co‐owned) adjacent channel KDKA.
And they do occasionally shut it off for up to 2-3 weeks at a time, either for tower work (hence, using the IBOC‐less alt. xmtr), or waiting for a software upgrade/replacement.
However, after being off several times since last summer for 2-3 weeks at a stretch, coming back on Dec.6th, then going off again a week later, it hasnʼt been back since (well over 2 ������������ )!!
Can we actually celebrate...or am I jinxing it by saying anything and it turns out to just be an extended outage?!? P=/
HD doesn't belong on AM! It only belongs on FM! I say that radio manufacturers start plugging HD FM radios today.
But the real reason it was a failure was lack radios with the capability to receive IBOC broadcasts
HD doesn't belong on AM! It only belongs on FM! I say that radio manufacturers start plugging HD FM radios today.
Plus they were a closed technology that didn't allow anyone else to make improvements. Both of those things don't work in today's world.
You mean like iPhones, iPads and Mac computers?
I have one HD radio, and do not have one preset as a HD2 on the FM side
But the real reason it was a failure was lack radios with the capability to receive IBOC broadcasts.
I have one HD radio, and do not have one preset as a HD2 on the FM side
All HD Radio tuners will receive AM or FM in HD.
Not my Insignia portable -- it's FM only.
It's chip is capable of HD-AM, assuming the tuner inside the radio has AM. Cheap portable radios that most consumers wouldn't bother owning are the exception, not the norm. All the car radios have HD capability for AM and FM.
I believe he means the Insignia HD personal (Walkman-style) portables that were made with the FM band only. No AM band at all. I've had some of them. .
No, not a Walkman. This is is the model "NS-HDRAD" (bizarre nomenclature, but that's what's on the plate in the back; the front just says "Insignia' and "HDRadio" with no model info at all. That back plate actually describes it as a "tabletop," and while it's true that it has no handle, it is very easy to pick up and carry around. It runs on four AA batteries or AC and it is FM only. It was the lone HD-capable receiver for sale at Best Buy when I got it in 2013 or 2014.
Here's a photo of the unit:
https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon.com/images/I/412hzEVX3wL.jpg
880 WCBS's HD Radio is back on. I think for the few days it was off they just forgot to turn it back on after a Mets game, and nobody noticed.
Are they going to repay my AM Stereo receiver and HD receiver costs because they wouldn't stick with it - no.