H
hitNrun
Guest
I knew, that HD-AM caused adjacent-channel interference, but I wanted to find out for myself. With my digitally-tuned car and hand-held radios, I have not noticed the digital saddle-bags on AM (of course), but today, I tried one of my analog-tuned radios and found this constant rushing sound of a waterfall (almost, like the sound of waves washing ashore, but amplified 100 times), JUST above and below the main analog channels on three AM stations. So, I went to iBiquity's site, and sure enough, they listed the three stations broadcasting in AM-HD (the only ones, in my area):
http://www.ibiquity.com/hd_radio/hdradio_find_a_station
There is absolutely no doubt, this was not just regular interference from electrical devices (sounds differently - too consistent), because I tried the radio downstairs, upstairs, and outside, well-away from the house, with the same results. This technology, if implemented widely, will doom the AM band. For what it is worth, I did email the three AM stations to complain.
http://www.ibiquity.com/hd_radio/hdradio_find_a_station
There is absolutely no doubt, this was not just regular interference from electrical devices (sounds differently - too consistent), because I tried the radio downstairs, upstairs, and outside, well-away from the house, with the same results. This technology, if implemented widely, will doom the AM band. For what it is worth, I did email the three AM stations to complain.