KB1OKL said:
Here are his comments on FM transmitters from the same document:
I wouldn't occur to you that the original author has an agends, more on that later.
FM Stations
a – Price – The equipment price for an HD Radio transmitter and antenna system
is prohibitively expensive!! The average HD Radio package is a minimum of
$100,000. and can be as high as $250,000.
"Prohibitive" -for whom? No viable FM should have a problem with this sort of capital expense, depreciated over atleast a decade of the equipment's life.
b – Limited Coverage – The system has been promoted to have an acceptable
signal as far as the 55db contour. We have found that the signal is useable in
practice to the 75db contour.
"
WE have found' No proof, as usual nut I do get a kick out that "royal" "We".
c- No consumer incentive – Fifty percent of the digital spectrum is a repetition of
the FM analog stereo channel. In a reasonably matched system the FM analog is
comparable quality to the digital when the digital is within its limited range.
There is no incentive for the consumer to use “HD Radio”.
Well let's see. FM iboc offers much better sound quality both due to the absence of extreme high fhz clipping, no lousy composite clipper, much better separation without distortion from multipath.
That last point is worth expanding-on. Last Thursday there was a live broadcast of Madame Butterfly from Lincoln center,. Our T.W. cable has poor audio so I tuned in WQxR's simulcast for the audio on my home theater system. The system consists of Sherwood receiver and DCM, Paradigm and and A.R. speakers. It took a full 15 minutes of fussing with the BIC beambox to get reasonable decent sound that didn't jarr everyone with bursts of multipath distortion.
WQXR is one of the only commercial stations that has not implemented iboc here, had it been so equipped I could have simply have patched the output from the acurian and saved myself alot of the usual annoyance.
Given the topography and RF environment here, FM iboc is now an essential for decent FM stereo, particularly for classical music.
Adjacent Channel Interference. We have reports from our customers that HD
Radio has caused major interference with existing FM stations that operate on the
adjacent channel to an HD Radio station. It is well known that their FM “IBOC
stations” operate from 130KHz to 200KHz from their analog center frequency.
More "we have reports" - nothing.
e – Annual Licensing Fee – IBiquity has a monopoly on the HD Radio system.
This system cannot be used without paying an annual licensing fee which can be
determined by the management of IBiquity. It is difficult to understand that the
FCC would establish a standard which is controlled by a proprietary source.
Deceptive garbage.
This link courtesy "Dumber" -thanks, gives the
facts:
http://www.ibiquity.com/i/pdfs/Licensing_%20Fact_%20Sheet_2008.pdf
Note the "one time fee" for the main iboc channel and a 3% or $1000 for each additional hd channel.
Do you really "think" that is a problem for a station?
Finally, the original author has a company offering a competing FM digital system, you don't suppose that, and the possibility that his own line can not be modified for HD would be motivating factors...do you.
http://www.energy-onix.com/HTML/DRE.html
BTW: Any radios for this great system?
Open your mind and eyes, or go away.
Lino