Len14043 said:
If the programming was different, that still wouldn't be an issue because Kenosha County is well outside the protected contour of WWDV. In fact, Kenosha County is located between the 40 and 50 dBm contour and is not protected at that point. See the following link:
http://radio-locator.com/cgi-bin/pat?call=WDRV&service=FM&status=L&hours=U
No, legally you're right, they are not within the 'protected contour' in Kenosha County. But Lake County (near Gurnee) is getting closer to that protection zone for WDRV and there was some interference there. It's becoming clear to me that some owners will push their hash right to the edge of their first-adjacent neighbor's protected 60 dbu contour. And, a lot of people listen to stations from outside of their 60 dbu contour, which is hardly generous.
Again, Bonneville programs 96.9 as a repeater of 97.1. In this case, no harm done. But the lesson here is what CAN or WILL happen elsewhere.
Len14043 said:
Where WDRV is affected by the digital sideband of WWDV, they would likely be affected by analog interference. You just can't hear the analog interference now because the digital signal is suppressing it due to the capture effect. You are correct when you refer to the short spacing policy of the FCC. But it is not the fault of IBOC, in that IBOC merely helps to reveal that problem.
With modern equipment, not nearly as much. I have radios that can easily pick out a first adjacent signal from a strong local. Particularly when that first adjacent still has a healthy signal as was the case with WDRV in that area. Not strong or local grade, but healthy. People in that area DO listen to Chicago FMs, even if the FCC has ruled that they have no right to do so.
The trouble with IBOC (and why it's different) is that you're actually lopping signal into the adjacent channel in order to make room for the entire datastream. So, out of necessity, for 96.9 to broadcast in HD, their signal has to lop into 96.7 and 97.1. When you're close enough to 96.9's transmitter site, your radio (set to 97.1) will decide to lock in on the HD sideband of 96.9 rather than the 4 or 5 out of 10 signal coming from 40 miles away. Before IBOC, it wouldn't do that until 97.1 was so weak as to lose signal or 96.9 was so strong that you would have overload. My system doesn't tend to overload like that. Remember, FM is unlike AM in that any given moment you almost always are tuned to one signal or another. Even if they cut in and out.
By the way, with the newer DSP radios, you can pull in a very weak first adjacent (even just a whisper) with a local grade sitting right there - as long as you don't have the sidebands to deal with. Mine can pull out 94.9 WOLX Baraboo, WI (150 miles from me) with local 94.7 WLS-FM right there.
Yes, technically, it's legal to have sidebands stepping all over signals that are still relatively strong and useful. But it's not good when it comes to how radio is perceived and how it serves it's audience.