How many standard clock radios have HD capability.I completely agree with you.But the guy said people can't get them.And that's simply not true.
My car has a HD radio and honestly most of the time it’s not even receiving the signal.
How many standard clock radios have HD capability.I completely agree with you.But the guy said people can't get them.And that's simply not true.
What's being overlooked is that HD Radio was developed in response to a threat to conventional FM radio that turned out to be way overblown -- satellite radio. Even if iBiquity didn't hamstring it by going the "greed is good" route and demanding the licensing fee from manufacturers, it still would have bombed. SiriusXM, despite all those radios in all those cars, and a government-approved monopoly that locks out any competition, still has fewer than 40 million subscribers, and dozens of channels that are listened to by fewer people nationwide than a typical local FM in a major market. HD was stillborn, and now, with the consumers in the money demos -- and the future consumers they're raising -- turning away from radio, it's not going to be brought to life by the generations that lament radio's heyday.
I got a 2019 Hyundai Tucson a few months back and it was the first with an HD radio. There aren't any HD stations closer than Memphis so it doesn't do me any good.My car has a HD radio and honestly most of the time it’s not even receiving the signal.
Like BruceB said, and like I mentioned earlier, they're available where everyone shops for electronics -- online.They could promote it all they want, if you can’t get a radio with HD in it what’s the point.
Agreed, except when HD Radio was rolled out, internet streaming was still in its relative infancy. I remember listening to Radio streams online back in the mid to late 2000's. Buffering, glitchy, and you had to have your computer to listen because many phones at the time didn't have good internet operations. While it's true the IPhone and other smartphones were available, I remember most of my friends and acquaintances still having flip phones until around 2010.If HD Radio had been able to launch a decade earlier, it might've taken off. By the time it had actually launched anywhere in the real world, people had more entertainment options. The true digital future of radio had already become understood to be internet, not transmitter, delivered, and the intended audience was already looking at those options rather than new radios, which it had already stopped buying en masse.
If your giving it away I will take it as I always wanted a Sangean componant tuner but they are too expensive for me to buy.I believe the current model of Sangean HD component tuner is the HDT-20. I have the HDT-1, which was the first one, and the HDT-1X, which was an improvement on it. (Anybody want an HDT-1? I haven't used mine in years.)
Agreed, except when HD Radio was rolled out, internet streaming was still in its relative infancy. I remember listening to Radio streams online back in the mid to late 2000's. Buffering, glitchy, and you had to have your computer to listen because many phones at the time didn't have good internet operations. While it's true the IPhone and other smartphones were available, I remember most of my friends and acquaintances still having flip phones until around 2010.
The problem was that the equipment was expensive, it was too restricted in scope (too few brands, and the reputable radio makers didn't have many, if any, HD radio models), and the promotion was horrible. Would it have changed anything in the long run had it been done "right"? Not so sure. The internet operative smartphone changed everything. It's already chopping into OTA radio (and probably satellite as well), so there's no evidence that had HD been rolled out better it still wouldn't have been cast aside eventually, because it's OTA.
Car radios with HD also get AM HD and it sounds good but there are not many AM stations that broadcast in HD. There never were any in rural areas where you live and the AM HD signal does not go out that far reliably when the AM is also broadcasting in analog.This may be semi-related, but do current car radios with HD have it for FM only or is it also on AM? I know that I can't get anything in HD on FM in my area and I haven't tried it on AM yet. The vehicle I have with it is actually the one my wife drives so I haven't tried it on AM yet, but there's really nothing I want to hear on AM anyway.
If 2021 and 2022 models are considered current, then the answer is YES, there are HD radios with both FM and AM bands, I have a 2021 Toyota Avalon Hybrid and all Toyota Avalons have a radio that in one unit, has the SXM satellite and the JBL HD radios with both AM and FM. Fortunately for me, when in Tampa, there is an HD AM station (WTMP-1150) that has a format of Motown and R&R from the 1960’s-1980’s. They broadcast in HD during the daylight hours, but both translators (one in Tampa and one just north of Saint Petersburg, broadcast in HD 24/7 - both at 250 watts - the max allowed translators. (I had always wondered in translators could broadcast in HD and apparently they can, the HD on their translators gives a slightly more robust signal and filters out some of the interference from other translators). I have a friend with a Lexus EX350 2023 andit’s JBL HD radio also has both the AM and FM bands.This may be semi-related, but do current car radios with HD have it for FM only or is it also on AM? I know that I can't get anything in HD on FM in my area and I haven't tried it on AM yet. The vehicle I have with it is actually the one my wife drives so I haven't tried it on AM yet, but there's really nothing I want to hear on AM anyway.
Yes and no.I have a couple of questions about something that may be related to HD. FM stations provided Muzak to businesses, and there was a station in the Charlotte NC area that did reading for the blind for those who had special receivers. Is this somehow related to the technology that allows HD?
My observation from those early days of HD Radio was that it was originally marketed as a sound quality improvement to FM radio, equating to prior transition from vinyl to CDs.
Yes, WTMP has adjusted their format, it’s an odd mix to be sure, but I like it!! But……on their facebook page, almost everyone posting hates the new format and wants them to return to playing the old format.WTMP has adjusted their format. It's a bit hard to describe. It is almost like a oldies/classic hits station with a slight lean towards disco.
I agree.My experience has been that I turn the HD radio off when I'm driving a car that is equipped with it. The added digital compression is pretty obvious and (for me, at least) a dealbreaker.
My experience has been that I turn the HD radio off when I'm driving a car that is equipped with it. The added digital compression is pretty obvious and (for me, at least) a dealbreaker.