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HD stations

That makes sense, Alan, presuming from your narrative that you were south of the Santa Monica Mountains on your commute (the Westside being a brick-to-the-head clue). KBIG would get some terrain shielding from those hills, whereas KYSR is still at the same site atop those hills as it was when 98.7 signed on in 1948 as KMGM.
And later KCBH "City of Beverly Hills"
 
It's all one bit stream carrying the whole HD signal, whether it's HD1 or 2 or 3.

And for stations using the higher HD power levels that are now allowed by the FCC, HD coverage is pretty much comparable to 60 dBu analog coverage these days.
The difference being, HD abruptly stops at that point. No graceful fading into the noise like analog signals.

HD-1 at least has the analog signal to fall back on. HD2, HD3, etc. just go away.
 
Dodgers "Audio" Network sounds pretty good on HD! Wouldn't the visitors to this site prefer to listen on a radio than a phone?
Few people have "a radio" except in their car any longer. I'll bet there are many, like myself, who have no radio in their home or office that is not just an "emergency radio" in a drawer or part of the old "stereo" than never gets turned on any more.

But my home has a half dozen Amazon "Alexa" devices, each of us has an iPhone and an iPad and a laptop as well. If we want audio, we don't need a separate device.

A few weeks ago, we did some Spring housecleaning. I sent to Goodwill some old kitchen and bedroom radios, several prior generation video cards and two 6 to 7 year old laptops. All were refused, and my handyman who took them said he was told, "we don't take old computer stuff and don't take radios at all. Nobody wants them."
 
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"we don't take old computer stuff and don't take radios at all. Nobody wants them."

So Ebay them. I just searched completed sales for Philips CD clock radio (randomly picking a second-tier brand) and nearly every listing sold for between $25-$40 + shipping. Very few black (unsold) listings, nearly all of them are green (sold).
 
I forgot what I was reading

How come DAB Radio was gaining ground vs HD in the U.S?

Like no one hear in the U.s would buy HD Radios, There old Radio's work just fine

In the U.K there buying DAB Radio's
 
I forgot what I was reading

How come DAB Radio was gaining ground vs HD in the U.S?

Like no one hear in the U.s would buy HD Radios, There old Radio's work just fine

In the U.K there buying DAB Radio's
The places where DAB has been "successful" is where the national government has signficantly greater control over broadcasting than we have in the USA.

England did not have local commercial radio for the first half-century of broadcasting. And when commercial radio was permitted, it was in a form more limited than in the U.S.A.

So, when the "powers that be" decided to "move radio" to the digital band, there was much less opposition that would have taken place in the U.S.A. On the other hand, we picked a system that supposedly enhanced existing stations without changing their coverage, market position or competitive situation.

Note that nowhere in the Western Hemisphere has DAB been adopted as a replacement or complement to AM and FM. While AM is dying everywhere... at different rates in different nations... no nation has substituted DAB for the existing system. Brazil expanded the FM band. But from Mexico to Argentina, we have AM and FM and no DAB because the systems are much more free enterprise dominated and far less dictated by government.

We have several posters who are in England who can compare their system and the politics that drive the economy there. Let's ask them, Mario, for some first hand input for comparison.
 
I have a tabletop HD radio that I listen to regularly and take with me when I travel. But that's because this is a lifelong interest of mine.
 


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