audioguy said:
There were some gripes with "platform motion" due to co-channel interference in the outer fringes of a station's coverage area, but at least it did not create interference to other stations and it did not degrade the station's mono signal!
I never experienced any problems with platform motion. When DE started posting on here the iBiquity party line about C-Quam limiting coverage and there were problems with platform motion in the LA basin with all the mountains around, on weak signals - I found the worst possible listening scenario that would duplicate the LA basin / weak C-Quam signal scenario. I went 290 miles - yes 290 miles - from the DFW area - and did a test in the canyon near Crosbyton. I was prepared with a loop antenna - but to my surprise I didn't need it. DFW stations on 620, 770, and 820 that ran C-Quam were not only receivable, but actually still pleasant to listen to, with a modest walkman AM stereo model - the SRF-A1. I cleaned up reception to static free with a small loop, and experienced no platform motion at all. Not even on 770, which was starting to experience interference from co-channel KKOB.
The Crosbyton canyon is a serious canyon with walls hundreds of feet high, a lot of odd angles and side canyons - if anything was going to cause problems that place would. It certainly does cause problems with FM, even semi-local Lubbock FMs. But AM stereo? Solid as a rock on an inexpensive receiver. What station manager could possibly gripe about 290 mile daytime stereo reception on a walkman??? What more do they want - its not like the rattlesnakes in the canyon care about Dallas Ft. Worth reception 290 miles away, let alone the few ranchers in the canyon.
Contrast those fantastic results, demonstrating once and for all, the abysmal coverage of the same stations post the IBOC conversion. WBAP has trashed the system because it really WAS hurting their range, unlike the fictional range decrease associated with C-Quam. The decrease in range is real and dramatic on AM - there was a small but loyal standards audience in NW Houston for KAAM when Houston lost its standards station. No more - KAAM's daytime coverage now sucks, and is almost obliterated by sidebands from local 790.
Same canyon, a few years later, post IBOC. Both stations running IBOC were seriously weaker post the conversion, almost unlistenable. KKOB owned the frequency on 770. 620 lost probably 100 miles of their range post conversion, although they are receivable if you are away from power lines in Lubbock. Nothing like the semi - strong signal they used to have. 660, by comparison, is the same now as it was before. And it is very strong in NW Houston. I wouldn't be surprised if they had a few listeners. Same with WBAP. I heard it severely degraded in Houston post conversion in NW Houston, now the IBOC, they are strong again. KLIF - same thing. Once almost a match for KTSA and even KLVI in parts of NW Houston, now it is severely degraded and weak. Why should they care? Because most people don't own a decent radio, and their signals are probably trashed over suburban areas of DFW, where they really WOULD care one way or the other. So the signal degradation with C-Quam wasn't real, but degradation with IBOC is definitely real.
As far as stereo range with IBOC - don't make me laugh. KAAM with C-Quam: 290 miles. KAAM with IBOC: not even 9.6 miles. Nine point six, not 96. What sort of DFW audience does less than 10 mile radius reach? The area is 120 miles EW and 70 or 80 NS in places. You won't reach but a tiny fraction with a stereo system that has less range than a LP FM or translator.
Bottom line: IBOC sucks compared to C-Quam. iBiquity needs to throw in the towel but quick and market C-Quam as "IBOC". At least it works and won't hurt sales of radios that won't work.