Tom Wells said:I suspect it is less a problem with very narrow IF response that can be achieved in modern design.
Old radios with simple 10.7 IF transformers are probably a little too wide to keep the noise fully out,
especially when driving through multipath areas and the signal has dropouts.
That's exactly the case, Tom. If you look at the "haystack" generated by FM HD, a perfect one will occupy the bandwidth up to 200 KHz above and below the assigned carrier frequency. Essentially, HD has widened the occupied bandwidth of an FM station from 200 to 400 KHz. So as you move up or down one channel with a radio having ceramic-filter selectivity ('80's vintage and newer) the receiver solidly captures the noise. A brand new radio (like the Sangeans, Tecsun's, or an HD receiver) with a digital demodulator sees 1/2 the channel full of digital carriers and the other 1/2 blank. So it can't lock on to much of anything and stays pretty quiet. Old radios with IF transformers will slope-detect the digital carriers, producing the whine that's being discussed here.
Of course, if the HD signal is gone the ceramic-filter radio and the brand new radio will be able to hear a regular analog station on that frequency.
Dave B.