Lkeller said:
There are some good HD2 channels here in the Bay Area, and I find the reception consistently good when I travel locally. Of course, when the HD signal goes down, the HD1 defaults to analog (so you can still hear it), but the HD2 goes out entirely.
It would help if the industry could give incentives to car manufacturers to put HD receivers in their new cars. From what I've heard, that move has helped XM/Sirius immensely. Last time I heard, only BMW was offerering HD in their new vehicles.
I find it interesting that San Francisco, a place where the geography makes it necessary to have several repeaters to ensure market coverage of some stations, has consistently good HD reception when a market like Los Angeles does not. I still maintain that the technology is faulty -- to the point where the signal strength has been restricted because of it -- and those faults and that restriction are a good portion of what cripples HD, since receivers can't maintain a signal lock even in areas where there is supposedly a city-grade local signal.
Which leads me to my next point. HD Radio has been on the air for around six years now, and it's still not at the point where it's technologically viable on the scale that it's being presented to the public. Within a year or so of satellite radio's launch, most of its reception issues had been worked out, and I was able to road-test it both in heavily populated areas and places where you could scan the FM dial and not get any stations, and satellite did not have problems in any of these situations.
HD Radios are already being offered in BMWs, Jaguars, Hyundais, Mini Coopers, Volvos, Fords, Lincolns, Mercurys, Mercedes-Benzes, Kias, Land Rovers and Scions, with plans to expand them to Audis in the 2011 model year.