menotti1 said:
http://www.sendspace.com/file/ruv0bq
try this fileWOR's HD comes on at :28 seconds into the clip.
Receiver: Magnavox 563 AM-FM-PSB radio (circa 1978) No external antanna, running off batteries.
WLW MIDNITE WOR HD START AT ABOUT 28 SECONDS , .WLW IS IN CINCINATTI,WOR NEW YORK reception was in new york..
Where in New York? Considering that it's a first adjacent, I don't think the interference is that bad if you're in NYC. What would it have sounded like 50 years ago when the clears were still clear but AM radio stations ran programming that uses higher audio frequencies, like music?
I wasn't around when the clear channels were truly clear and music was still common on AM, but you should have heard what Mexican station XETRA 690 was doing to first adjacent KNBR about 2 years ago when it was managed by Clear Channel and was running Adult Standards. The noise was enough to make KNBR temporarily inaudible
north of downtown LA on typical radios lacking SSB. IBOC hiss is annoying, but the hiss in your recording is actually consistent less annoying than the unpredictable analog splatter I was hearing from XETRA.
Farther south, in Orange and coastal sections of San Diego counties, KNBR would sometimes disappear under splatter for 1-2 minutes at a time, depending on the song being played on 690. At times the splatter, combined with KNBR fadeouts, would be enough to cause even my receiver with SSB capabilities to lose its sync lock, causing an audible signal to suddenly and unexpectedly be replaced by something just as annoying as local IBOC first adjacent hiss.
This is why I think the mask should be restricted to -30 dBc @ 5 kHz, -50 dBc at 7.5 kHz, and -70 dBc at 10 kHz. 50 kW of pure digital would go pretty darn far under those conditions, and wouldn't buzz all over neighboring stations.