I didn't know the tinfoil hat crowd had a dog in this fight. Now I do. Yes, sigh.
I am using the Nielsen MSA (Metro Survey Area), as defined by them.
Austin, TX
Brazoria, TX
Chambers, TX
Fort Bend, TX
Galveston, TX
Harris, TX
Liberty, TX
Montgomery, TX
Polk, TX
San Jacinto, TX
Waller, TX
For adequate indoor reception, a 65 dbu signal is required. Not even the non-directional full power translators near downtown cover even Harris County adequately, much less the rest of the market.
Even in cars, 60 dbu is about the limit with all the translators, HD sidebands and LPFM stations today. 60 is the protected contour for "Full" stations, and translators are the poor relatives that get all kinds of interference... which in Houston includes inversion layers that are of monster proportions.
The 95.1 signal covers tidbits of Harris, Fort Bend and Brazoria counties. But its biggest problem is that, with 99 watts at 1800 feet, it has so little power that it really covers no place well. I have experience in LA with a facility that was 650 watts at 970 feet on a mountain overlooking the San Gabriel Valley. It barely showed in the ratings. We moved it to 6 kw at a conforming 300 feet on a little hill on the valley floor and it suddenly got nearly a 2 share (and in PPM, combined with its sister FM, a 4 share).
If a person has to seek out a signal, it is not going to get much listening.
I didn't know the tinfoil hat crowd had a dog in this fight. Now I do. Yes, sigh.
95-1's translator can be heard extremely well from Minute Maid Park/Downtown all the way to the Wharton in my car. Personally, I wouldn't call it an "inadequate signal," and of course car listening is the future of radio, as mentioned by yourself and other posters here (I think the majority of radio listening is in the car right now). I think if you were physically here in the Houston area and listened to Sangeet Radio terrestrially, I believe you would agree. 95-1, in my opinion, sounds just as good as KRBE in Harris, Fort Bend, and Wharton County. I haven't experienced the signal east of Harris, and I believe there is either an LPFM or translator that uses 95.1 to the east. KYKR out of Beaumont (also uses the frequency of 95.1) doesn't become a factor until you reach Anahuac or the Trinity River at best.
CT, what many don't realize is that this is only the beginning. 5G is about to take a large part of our TV spectrum, as well as frequencies up into the GHz bands. We are going to be bombarded with this high band radiation, some not all that much different than what is now use to cook our food. And scientists are now working on technology to distribute electricity wirelessly. https://futurism.com/stanford-scientists-are-making-wireless-electricity-transmission-a-reality/ I work around large transmitters on a daily basis. I understand the dangers. I've been too close to powered antennas, and know the eyes blurring/watering that causes, not to mention the warm sensation. So I'm wary of what is being done/proposed. I'm sorry if it puts me in the tin foil hat crowd, but I think this 5G stuff/wireless electric transmission is not progress. There was a reason why Tesla's plans for wireless electricity got scrapped.
Want make a wager? I bet you this is our old friend XXX.You do realize the wireless you're already "bombarded" with is what's used to cook food, right? Consumer microwave ovens use the 2.4 GHz ISM band, same as half the world's WiFi.
Want make a wager? I bet you this is our old friend XXX.
As for the 5G frying our brains and organs, it's non ionizing radiation.
You don't think consumer microwaves operate in the 2.4 GHz ISM band? Google "microwave oven frequency" and let us know what you find.
To be fair, and to stick up for those radio geeks out there, I do like the headphone jack better than Bluetooth. Many Bluetooth devices I try to listen to my phone on are battery-powered, and 3.5 MM headphones do not need to be charged all the time. Furthermore, some BlueTooth devices have problems pairing up with my phone, when connecting headphones means plugging in a jack and anyone can do that.
Maybe, if the NAB pressures Apple/Google/others to activate the FM chips, they may start building USB to headphone adapters and use those devices to pick up FM signals...
Heck, the NAB could build a receiver and an app and sell it like crazy.
Back up your claims. I can show you links to national surveys by reputable companies that state otherwise. Show us your data.
I've been inside approximately 100 homes over the last year, and I've seen four radios with terrestrial radio capability.
Except the ‘FM chips’ in many phones are imaginary. The iPhone has no such chip, for example, and what would make Apple want to redesign their phones just to add one?
The iPhone had an FM chip until the iPhone 8. All prior models have chips in them. Why? Because some countries mandate them. This country does not.
However, the Chairman of the FCC has lobbied Apple to activate its chips. Of course, he could do what other countries have done, and mandate it.
Still there are millions and millions of working iPhones that have FM chips in them.
The FM chip is NOT "imaginary." Here is a list of devices with FM chips:
http://nextradioapp.com/supporteddevices/
What would make these companies add chips? An FCC mandate, for one thing. All phones must be certified by the FCC. So they could have a rule that in order to be certified, it must have a working FM chip. The FCC doesn't like mandating things for manufacturers, although they have no problem mandating rules for broadcasters. But this could change.
Sorry to disagree, Big A, but there is no way for even older iPhones to access FM radio.
Sorry, but I find it hard to believe that many people still listen to the radio outside of their cars. And an even harder time believing that most sit through a bunch of ads without touching the dial on their car.Did you tour the entire home? Or are you basing that just in the main living area?
What is a "radio with terrestrial radio capability?" I typically listen on my laptop. Doesn't that count? A PPM could pick it up.
A lot of people want to take their own personal experience and extrapolate that into some kind of larger truth. It isn't.