Listening to my favorite Classic Rock station on a hi-fi monaural table radio, I can't help but notice that whenever a Beatles song, or something else with very wide separation comes on, the loudness falls off the map. And this is on a major Top 10 market station transmitting HD, so I'm sure they're using the latest-and-greatest processing, or something very near to it.
C-Quam AM Stereo avoids this problem by using matrix processing, but I've always been told this is impossible on FM. But with today's new techniques and DSP processing power, is there any effective way to accomplish it on FM?
I know many of today's processors let you run the AGC in matrix (L+R/L-R) mode, but I don't know how effective that is, because the audio still has to go through a whole bunch of limiters and clippers operating in the normal L/R mode before the rubber meets the road.
Is the best you can do just to restrict the L-R level to about 70-75%, to make up for some of the loss of loudness, at the expense of reduced separation?
C-Quam AM Stereo avoids this problem by using matrix processing, but I've always been told this is impossible on FM. But with today's new techniques and DSP processing power, is there any effective way to accomplish it on FM?
I know many of today's processors let you run the AGC in matrix (L+R/L-R) mode, but I don't know how effective that is, because the audio still has to go through a whole bunch of limiters and clippers operating in the normal L/R mode before the rubber meets the road.
Is the best you can do just to restrict the L-R level to about 70-75%, to make up for some of the loss of loudness, at the expense of reduced separation?