DavidEduardo said:
We turned off C Quam at 50 kw KTNQ in LA in about 1996 because the platform motion was nauseating. On a drive with the DoE of the station, we had to pull over so he could get out of the car and heave...
And the C Quam caused enough artifacts in the sharper null areas of the DA that, when we turned it off, the ratings increased by about 800% in the metro ZIP codes that were affected (a small impact, overall, but ample proof that we had a problem with C Quam).
Many larger companies clamp off streaming in offices. In any case, "at work" listening is a whole lot more than streaming.
I get an in-car HD lock on KFI and KNX at a point midway between the 5 mV/m and the 2 mV/m countours of each. KNX, at 1070, is signifcantly inward of the 640 KFI lockable contour.
That point is well beyond the roughly 10 mV/m usable contour for analog; LA is very noisy and the fact that dust "bakes" onto every power line insulator making it even worse in the 9 dry months is no help.
Anecdotally, I have had KFI consistently lock on HD from Chiriaco Summit to outside of Blythe on the I-10 Freeway... roughly 150 to 250 miles from the KFI site.
Nope. There are a couple of multi-level freeway over/underpasses in the metro where HD unlocks, but elsewhere there is no problem.
I guess it was you who posted about platform motion. Your experience is vastly different from mine. The swapping channels at night is as bad as it ever gets for me. And rugged terrain - I tried and tried - I hiked all over that canyon. Up one wall, up the other, looking for parallel cliff faces, perpendicular cliff faces - no platform motion. None at all. Only good stereo separation, slight background static. 290 miles - I was impressed! What a robust and reliable system it was. If there had been the slightest tendency for platform motion, it would have shown up, I know what you are talking about - what to listen for. it just wasn't there. It is possible a 5 to 7 mile wide canyon is smaller than the 30 to 40 mile canyons in LA. But both are significantly larger than the wavelength of the station, so I wouldn't think so.
But your observations are obviously valid, you observed them. I observed my observations. There is some unknown variable at work here. I do know both KMKI and KAAM are very well funded operations by people that really care about their audience, and the robustness of the signal bore that out. Obviously so are the large LA stations, so I doubt it is any lapse on the engineering staff at any of the stations. Unknown factor - that's the only explanation why you got platform motion and I didn't.
I've now had the opportunity to do drive tests on AM HD. I can tell you honestly - the biggest enemy it has is the power grid. Unfortunately, power lines run along streets and that is the end of HD lock as long as you are by power lines. As little as 5 miles from the station, and it is 5 kW. Your 150 to 250 mile reception is puzzling, WOAI is 180 miles away, they are a blowtorch, analog is strong and clear, people report it in HD from SA and Austin. Nothing here. Not even away from power lines, away from structures, in the clear, nothing around to cause a problem - nothing. No HD lock. Back to local HD. Lock time is another problem. In a thunderstorm - lightning bolt, HD lock gone for at least 5 seconds. Under an overpass, HD lock gone for at least five seconds. Power line over the freeway, HD lock gone for 5 or ten seconds. My worst fear - dropping out of lock to hear a very loud power line buzz abruptly - happened multiple times. Side street with power lines, HD is gone. This is going on near enough to the station it shouldn't be happening. Head unit is Pioneer's top of the line 9400, and I've still got the 31 inch whip. Pioneer makes a good RF chain- clear on WOAI, clear on WBAP - AM is hotter than Pioneer has made in many years. Oh - and if platform motion made your colleague sick - some of the almost drops on AM HD would, too. Bizarre echos, chirps, whizzes, and in one case a very loud artifact, probably 20 dB louder than either the analog or the HD - one syllable in the voice, one note in the music - very loud and startling, several times. This would be a safety issue when driving for the easily startled.
FM - 103.5 from Austin almost strong as a local. Nothing wrong with the RF performance on FM. FM has a huge problem with nearby lightning, too - HD lock ends, those highly touted HD-2 channels abruptly go silent with every nearby strike, taking 5 to 10 seconds to come back. Extremely annoying.
We are radio people. We know the technology and trade offs. Based on what I heard, I wasted my money on a car radio. HD-2 is not reliable enough to be enjoyable. I am only 30 miles from a full Class C 2000 foot tower 100kW, flat terrain. Intermittent drop outs. NO consumer will ever want to put up with this stuff. It is way too unreliable. Your experience may be different, and that's OK. But my experience is what it is, too. As way too many people point out - DX'ers like myself are outmoded neanderthal throwbacks to a bygone era of radio or something. But without DX techniques, I'd have returned every HD radio I own as defective because there wouldn't be a chance of HD lock without decent antennas.
Mark me down as "not impressed". Three HD radios in - and several hundred dollars poorer - I am left with two home tuners that need a deep fringe yagi to get local stations in HD lock (we are talking GOOD HD tuners from Sangean and Sony- not junk) and a Pioneer Supertuner 3D that DX's AM and FM all day, but AM buzzes with power line noise for miles and miles even really near the station, then locks in HD for a few seconds when I drive a patch of road without power lines beside. It is a really bad joke and not even close to robust or reliable. The new Pioneer was because the old one was failing after several years of use. It just happened to have HD. I am not impressed with HD. Perhaps I will try the bottom loaded large whip approach and see if a DX antenna on a car will give better HD lock.