iyiyi said:John Q. Public takes a much easier route. He goes to a local convenience store or gas station and plunks down $19.95 (plus tax) for an FM modulator. He then is able to plug in the Insignia; just as he does the iPod, CD, satellite and any other audio component his in-dash tunes can't support. Set the modulator to a clear FM frequency and enjoy crystal clear HD stereo music. That is how millions of people enjoy music devices the factory installed equipment cannot play. Not even a screwdriver is needed, just the occasional couple of AA batteries.
iyiyi said:N1WVQ said:Radio World, August 11th 2010 edition: http://www.rwonline.com/article/hd-radio-shouldn39t-be-this-hard/3684
Yes, he was just about Pope of the Church of ibiquity.
Still is. iBiquity needed a good boot in the ass. Mr. Ray is one of the very few guys capable of administering one hard enough to get iBiquity's attention. He did.
His rant is a legitimate bitch about iBiquity's lack of front line support for HD's proponents. Basically told them that if they don't get their act together and their thumb out of their ass; they are going to relegate HD to oblivion.
He broke down the options, costs and goon work involved in replacing a $1,000 factory installed non-HD with a $500 amalgamation of adaptors and aftermarket radios for Joe Consumer to enjoy HD radio.
John Q. Public takes a much easier route. He goes to a local convenience store or gas station and plunks down $19.95 (plus tax) for an FM modulator. He then is able to plug in the Insignia; just as he does the iPod, CD, satellite and any other audio component his in-dash tunes can't support. Set the modulator to a clear FM frequency and enjoy crystal clear HD stereo music. That is how millions of people enjoy music devices the factory installed equipment cannot play. Not even a screwdriver is needed, just the occasional couple of AA batteries. Inexpensive underdash FM converters that played on AM radio enabled FM to take off in automobiles long before automakers started providing FM across their model lines. Inexpensive, easy install converters will do the exact same thing for HD.
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radiorob2.0 said:iyiyi said:N1WVQ said:Radio World, August 11th 2010 edition: http://www.rwonline.com/article/hd-radio-shouldn39t-be-this-hard/3684
Yes, he was just about Pope of the Church of ibiquity.
Still is. iBiquity needed a good boot in the ass. Mr. Ray is one of the very few guys capable of administering one hard enough to get iBiquity's attention. He did.
His rant is a legitimate bitch about iBiquity's lack of front line support for HD's proponents. Basically told them that if they don't get their act together and their thumb out of their ass; they are going to relegate HD to oblivion.
He broke down the options, costs and goon work involved in replacing a $1,000 factory installed non-HD with a $500 amalgamation of adaptors and aftermarket radios for Joe Consumer to enjoy HD radio.
John Q. Public takes a much easier route. He goes to a local convenience store or gas station and plunks down $19.95 (plus tax) for an FM modulator. He then is able to plug in the Insignia; just as he does the iPod, CD, satellite and any other audio component his in-dash tunes can't support. Set the modulator to a clear FM frequency and enjoy crystal clear HD stereo music. That is how millions of people enjoy music devices the factory installed equipment cannot play. Not even a screwdriver is needed, just the occasional couple of AA batteries. Inexpensive underdash FM converters that played on AM radio enabled FM to take off in automobiles long before automakers started providing FM across their model lines. Inexpensive, easy install converters will do the exact same thing for HD.
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.....Two things.....
The HD radios I've used need significant signal voltage to receive HD. A portable unit sitting inside a car won't pick up much HD unless you're within a few miles of the transmitter site. Also, the "crystal clear HD stereo music" won't be heard like that going through a low cost analog FM modulator. This would be the equivalent twenty-five years ago of dubbing a CD to a Certron cassette and then claiming "CD quality" on a Kraco car stereo.
Johnster said:Who would use a portable HD Radio in a car???
All the new cars come with them and I can pick up WBZ everhwere in my car in HD? No static at all.... HD
radiorob2.0 said:iyiyi said:N1WVQ said:Radio World, August 11th 2010 edition: http://www.rwonline.com/article/hd-radio-shouldn39t-be-this-hard/3684
Yes, he was just about Pope of the Church of ibiquity.
Still is. iBiquity needed a good boot in the ass. Mr. Ray is one of the very few guys capable of administering one hard enough to get iBiquity's attention. He did.
His rant is a legitimate bitch about iBiquity's lack of front line support for HD's proponents. Basically told them that if they don't get their act together and their thumb out of their ass; they are going to relegate HD to oblivion.
He broke down the options, costs and goon work involved in replacing a $1,000 factory installed non-HD with a $500 amalgamation of adaptors and aftermarket radios for Joe Consumer to enjoy HD radio.
John Q. Public takes a much easier route. He goes to a local convenience store or gas station and plunks down $19.95 (plus tax) for an FM modulator. He then is able to plug in the Insignia; just as he does the iPod, CD, satellite and any other audio component his in-dash tunes can't support. Set the modulator to a clear FM frequency and enjoy crystal clear HD stereo music. That is how millions of people enjoy music devices the factory installed equipment cannot play. Not even a screwdriver is needed, just the occasional couple of AA batteries. Inexpensive underdash FM converters that played on AM radio enabled FM to take off in automobiles long before automakers started providing FM across their model lines. Inexpensive, easy install converters will do the exact same thing for HD.
-
.....Two things.....
The HD radios I've used need significant signal voltage to receive HD. A portable unit sitting inside a car won't pick up much HD unless you're within a few miles of the transmitter site. Also, the "crystal clear HD stereo music" won't be heard like that going through a low cost analog FM modulator. This would be the equivalent twenty-five years ago of dubbing a CD to a Certron cassette and then claiming "CD quality" on a Kraco car stereo.
Johnster said:All the new cars come with them...
dumber than a box of hair said:Johnster said:All the new cars come with them...
Uh, no. A tiny fraction of the available new cars in the US come with them, and only four brands have made them standard: BMW, Mini, Scion and Volvo. According to my sources in the new-car business, lots of them are the subject of warranty complaints, as in: "They keep cutting out" or "there's some missing audio" or "they get muddy suddenly" or "this #$%^&* radio can't pick up the signals" or "my HD2 programs keep dropping out" or etc., etc., etc.,etc... Particularly on high-end vehicles like BMW's, owners who have shelled out $40,000+ for a car do not tolerate equipment that doesn't work right the first time.
http://www.hdradio.com/buyers-guide/new-car
Johnster said:Who would use a portable HD Radio in a car???
All the new cars come with them and I can pick up WBZ everhwere in my car in HD? No static at all.... HD
JIBGUY said:Doomed as we know it, but not doomed. The AM band will be all (1) ethnic, (2) religious, (3) adult-standards (4) for English-speaking people who want to do their thing on radio for little money [little money compared to what is being charged by the hour, now], kind of like college stations, (5) a mixture of other specialized English-speaking music formats such as folk, pure album rock and local bands.
The latter.... especially with album- and local rock.... might catch on quite well. The fidenlity of AM radio may be a welcome sound after years of wearing ear-buds! If WFNX went to the AM band right now, it would survive.
JIBGUY said:But news and sports (in English) will be off the AM band in most markets. 1030 may be one of the few exceptions nationwide.
But all of this will give radio air-time to more people. The question is... will the decreased income for each AM station be able to pay for the large expenses of maintaining a tower site?
5 years from now.... AM will have 15% of the audience.
ssetta said:There is actually one format that is usually on AM that nobody seems to have brought up yet. Radio Disney. Now there's a format that should definitely be on FM instead of AM...
I guess maybe they figured it would be okay on AM because (no offense) most of the music they play on there doesn't need to be in HD, but most kids today don't even know that radio exists, let alone AM radio.
iyiyi said:WBZ 1030 HD. I live over 50 miles from their xmtr so HD reception is in and out - mostly out.
wcozBoston said:Is there anything to lose by giving this band a try?
wcozBoston said:Should the FCC consider the 76 to 88MHz band for extended FM? They could hire smart individuals to really plan every market out and even have a portion of it set aside exclusively for low power FM stations. Some of the AM stations could move to the new extended band allowing for more clear channel AM to exist. The question will be how long it takes for it to get any kind of market penetration. Is there anything to lose by giving this band a try?
wcozBoston said:Should the FCC consider the 76 to 88MHz band for extended FM? They could hire smart individuals to really plan every market out and even have a portion of it set aside exclusively for low power FM stations. Some of the AM stations could move to the new extended band allowing for more clear channel AM to exist. The question will be how long it takes for it to get any kind of market penetration. Is there anything to lose by giving this band a try?
I like PART of this idea. If it was up to me, I'd allow an additional 60 channels for FM broadcast. It could either cover the 82-88 MHz or the 108-114 MHz spectrum. With this, you could move many AM stations to this new expanded band, thereby clearing up much of the mayhem that exists on the current AM band. If it was up to me, I'd allow those stations which had the most compromised service patterns to move there. I would also allow for certain frequencies (probably up to ten channels) to allow for stations to broadcast up to 100,000 watts nationwide.wcozBoston said:Should the FCC consider the 76 to 88MHz band for extended FM? They could hire smart individuals to really plan every market out and even have a portion of it set aside exclusively for low power FM stations. Some of the AM stations could move to the new extended band allowing for more clear channel AM to exist. The question will be how long it takes for it to get any kind of market penetration. Is there anything to lose by giving this band a try?