R
rbrucecarter5
Guest
>>>> If you wanted FM Stereo, it was available, but at an extra charge that a lot of people declined at purchase.Because all that was on FM was "beautiful music" and deep throated DJ's>>>>> I think it was around 1972 or 73 when local FM stations would offer promotions with an adapter you could purchase to allow you to listen to FM Mono through your >>>>>> AM car radio. I had one of those adapters in my car for a couple of years.Now it is little modulators - meant for iPods that put stereo music through your FM stereo radio. Only - I used mine for AM stereo from an SRF-A1 until 620 and 770 went IBOC. Now, I use it for my portable DVD player. It makes movies sure sound nice!>>>>>> In the mid to late 60s and very early 70s, your average middle class family had an FM Stereo inside the home -- but never really listened to it. I made the switch in the early 70's, when I figured out FM could go 300 miles and Dallas stations were listenable in West Texas with a big antenna and good tuner.>>>>>, "Today will be my last day on KLIF."That was frustrating, because 300 mile reception in cars was not possible. I was stuck with KLIF, and their signal was not good in Midland. Still, there were already rumors of a frequency swap with 570, and they had a fairly good signal in Midland.>>>>> Despite the turnover, and the fact that the station was obviously suffering, it wasn't until the new "Z-97" FM went commercial free for several weeks, Was that the KWXI era? We got them on cable, but cable FM had a buzz on it. It was actually better with an antenna, but 300 mile FM DX is characterized by deep fades.>>>> Recently, I've been noticing some new car commercials where the manufacturers are throwing in a Sirius satellite radio receiver with a free three year subscription.This is the death blow to IBOC in cars. Everybody will go for satellite - better selection. Removing the subscription fee is the nail in the coffin. I don't like paying for satellite, but if it was free, I would listen.>>>>As for HD Radio, it looks to me like it's going to go the way of AM Stereo... Actually - if AM IBOC isn't approved at night, C-Quam would make sense for desperate broadcasters wanting the audio quality 24/7. IBOC day, C-Quam night is probably viable. More work for receiver manufacturers and broadcast engineers, but it makes some sense. >>>>> The only thing that could save HD Radio is if it becomes standard on new cars at no additional charge -- and I doubt that is going to happen...I'd like to see a head unit that broadcasts over an FM modulator - that way I could get the HD-2 on FM and somewhat improved AM, although the Ibiquity sample has those annoying phase shifts typical of streaming audio. I'd rather have 10 kHz C-Quam that doesn't have those phase shifts than 15 kHz IBOC that does have them. After a few minutes, streaming audio even on broadband causes listener fatigue because of the phase shifts. They are irritating. And the reason nobody likes music on shortwave, too.[/quote]