DAVID WROTE: "HD did not do anything to discourage listening. 690 did not show in LA because the programming sucks...the 690 signal, withour without inteference, is just not good enough... it is 100% programming and not signal."
What if 690 AM's programming didn't, as you say, "suck"? The signal is now completely unlistenable across the L-A Metro all day long. Before KSPN 710's HD inteference, 690 had bigger 12+ numbers than your own KTNQ. Now you have one less competitor no matter what 690 decides to do. I now understand why you are such a big iBiquity booster!
DAVID WROTE: "1090 has never been viable in LA...and the bulk of listeners were in SD and OC, not LA County."
1090's signal starts to fade in northern Los Angeles County. So thanks to HD interference from KNX 1070 and KDIS 1110, they lose the most populous part of Los Angeles County and all of Orange County in the 2-county L-A Metro.
DAVID WROTE: "KMXE is a very marginal signal."
So you're saying this 50,000 watter at 830 AM on the dial is a marginal signal for HD purposes? That rules out more than 90 percent of the AM stations in America. If I were iBiquity, I'd try to put a lid on that piece of information, but WHOOPS, you just let it out here.
DAVID WROTE: "Arbitron sez: AM Drive in car is 37% of AQH listening, mid-days is 26% and PM Drive is 42%. 6 to Midnight, it is 32% in Spring, and has been around 30% for several years. I believe that what you are quoting, inaccruately, is in the car cume, not AQH actual listening... but it could be anything. I got my data from Arbitron... in fact, I just ran 5 Am to 9 AM, a custom daypart, and in car is 41% in that daypart. All is 12+ Spring 2006."
The Southern California Broadcasters Association quotes the Winter 2006 Los Angeles Arbitron showing an 80.9& cume for in-car listening. They quote the Fall 2005 Arbitron AQH in-car share of listening M-S 6am-Midnight as being 33.7 percent. The daytime AQH numbers are of course much higher than the inaccurate "under 30 percent" figure you repeatedly stated earlier. I quote the SCBA because not everyone reading this has easy access to the book.
From the SCBA: http://rope.zscb.fimc.net/pdfs/la market media kit 2006.pdf
DAVID WROTE: "We have, in our company, about 60 BA radios. They are all lacking in sensitivity. In other words, not a good radio to judge HD on."
And this is what you're using to sell listeners on HD Radio? What a let-down after you buy one and take it home! Do you know how long it has taken to get iBiquity supporters to finally admit that the BA Receptor does a poor job of "recepting"? So public radio's recent decision to conduct a lengthy study on why HD Radio propagates so poorly is a waste of time?
DAVID WROTE: "There is no use talking about KAhn and his system...As to Leonard himself, he basically killed the opportunity to keep AM a viable music medium. Of course there is resentment. Most of us in AM management at the time still remember and regret what happened."
It is "personal" isn't it. Thank you for admitting so.
DAVID WROTE: "The system has already been adopted, 1000 stations are on the air, and about 2000 more are signed or committed by company policy. HD is adopted in Brazil, is being tested on air in Mexico City (on 690 where there are adjacents on 710 and 660 in the same market) and going on in Philippines, etc."
So it's "everybody jumping over-the cliff" together. It will be sad to hear the interference that will come from 75,000 watt AM 690 in Baja California coming back to bite KSPN 710 in Orange County and along the coast. When Baja's 50,000 watt 1090 fires up HD, KNX 1070 may as well shut down their San Diego news bureau, and maybe the Orange County bureau as well, in anticipation of AM 1090 going HD in retalliation.
What kind of a mess are we creating?
What if 690 AM's programming didn't, as you say, "suck"? The signal is now completely unlistenable across the L-A Metro all day long. Before KSPN 710's HD inteference, 690 had bigger 12+ numbers than your own KTNQ. Now you have one less competitor no matter what 690 decides to do. I now understand why you are such a big iBiquity booster!
DAVID WROTE: "1090 has never been viable in LA...and the bulk of listeners were in SD and OC, not LA County."
1090's signal starts to fade in northern Los Angeles County. So thanks to HD interference from KNX 1070 and KDIS 1110, they lose the most populous part of Los Angeles County and all of Orange County in the 2-county L-A Metro.
DAVID WROTE: "KMXE is a very marginal signal."
So you're saying this 50,000 watter at 830 AM on the dial is a marginal signal for HD purposes? That rules out more than 90 percent of the AM stations in America. If I were iBiquity, I'd try to put a lid on that piece of information, but WHOOPS, you just let it out here.
DAVID WROTE: "Arbitron sez: AM Drive in car is 37% of AQH listening, mid-days is 26% and PM Drive is 42%. 6 to Midnight, it is 32% in Spring, and has been around 30% for several years. I believe that what you are quoting, inaccruately, is in the car cume, not AQH actual listening... but it could be anything. I got my data from Arbitron... in fact, I just ran 5 Am to 9 AM, a custom daypart, and in car is 41% in that daypart. All is 12+ Spring 2006."
The Southern California Broadcasters Association quotes the Winter 2006 Los Angeles Arbitron showing an 80.9& cume for in-car listening. They quote the Fall 2005 Arbitron AQH in-car share of listening M-S 6am-Midnight as being 33.7 percent. The daytime AQH numbers are of course much higher than the inaccurate "under 30 percent" figure you repeatedly stated earlier. I quote the SCBA because not everyone reading this has easy access to the book.
From the SCBA: http://rope.zscb.fimc.net/pdfs/la market media kit 2006.pdf
DAVID WROTE: "We have, in our company, about 60 BA radios. They are all lacking in sensitivity. In other words, not a good radio to judge HD on."
And this is what you're using to sell listeners on HD Radio? What a let-down after you buy one and take it home! Do you know how long it has taken to get iBiquity supporters to finally admit that the BA Receptor does a poor job of "recepting"? So public radio's recent decision to conduct a lengthy study on why HD Radio propagates so poorly is a waste of time?
DAVID WROTE: "There is no use talking about KAhn and his system...As to Leonard himself, he basically killed the opportunity to keep AM a viable music medium. Of course there is resentment. Most of us in AM management at the time still remember and regret what happened."
It is "personal" isn't it. Thank you for admitting so.
DAVID WROTE: "The system has already been adopted, 1000 stations are on the air, and about 2000 more are signed or committed by company policy. HD is adopted in Brazil, is being tested on air in Mexico City (on 690 where there are adjacents on 710 and 660 in the same market) and going on in Philippines, etc."
So it's "everybody jumping over-the cliff" together. It will be sad to hear the interference that will come from 75,000 watt AM 690 in Baja California coming back to bite KSPN 710 in Orange County and along the coast. When Baja's 50,000 watt 1090 fires up HD, KNX 1070 may as well shut down their San Diego news bureau, and maybe the Orange County bureau as well, in anticipation of AM 1090 going HD in retalliation.
What kind of a mess are we creating?