Kmagrill said:It's being used extensively at some test stations in Alaska. According to their group CE, they have reduced the AM transmitters' power bills by almost half with no observed reduction of service nor increased interference. I don't think it would be very compatible with AM IBOC, or AM stereo, though if that matters to anyone.
Kmagrill said:It's being used extensively at some test stations in Alaska. According to their group CE, they have reduced the AM transmitters' power bills by almost half with no observed reduction of service nor increased interference. I don't think it would be very compatible with AM IBOC, or AM stereo, though if that matters to anyone.
The National Radio Systems Committee has recently convened a subcommittee to investigate the effects of MDCL technologies on the hybrid IBOC AM signal, especially at the receiver. Initial tests by manufacturers have demonstrated that MDCL operation is compatible with hybrid IBOC transmission at the transmitter, including full compliance with the AM IBOC RF spectral mask requirements. Tests of the compatibility of MDCL with hybrid AM IBOC on various types of receivers are underway. We will permit AM stations broadcasting in hybrid AM IBOC mode to implement energy-saving MDCL technology provided the hybrid signal continues to comply with spectral emissions mask requirements in Section 73.44,7 and also provided that the relative level of the analog signal to the digital signal remains constant.
Tom Wells said:The use of delay to avoid the surging is adding more cost/complication.
Tom Wells said:If you can't afford to produce full quieting, why take it out on the listeners?
Heck, why not convert everything to single sideband supressed carrier if you want to save even more money.
Why waste money on a frequency reference for the listener? Let them inject their own demod "carrier".
No one will notice pitch shifts of 100 hertz, right?
And everyone agrees that a good sideband rig sounds much better than full AM :.
R. Fry said:From the online sources referenced in the FCC Notice, the carrier will not drop by more than 6 dB maximum for low/no modulation -- so a receiver will not see a huge noise increase then. Also the action of the AGC in the receiver will tend to increase the output from the AM detector as the carrier is reduced, which will help mask whatever the added r-f noise is at that time. Supposedly the attack/decay times for carrier level control are compatible with the r-f/i-f AGC characteristics of most AM receivers.
Reportedly tests done in Europe have shown this technique to produce negligible side effects for most listeners (see the slideshow included in the pdf document linked below).
http://transition.fcc.gov/Daily_Releases/Daily_Business/2011/db0912/DOC-309538A1.pdf
Tom Wells said:This is old fashiioned carrier control. It always plays hell with receiver AGC response.
Amatuers tried to use this in the 30s and 40s. It can sound great under conditions of good signal to noise ratio
when you have a receiver that allows you set a manual RF gain with no AVC feedback.
If you don't have such a receiver, the normal AVC RF control will cause volume surging and ducking as
it attempts to counter-act the "savings" you have squeezed out of the power "wasted".
The same thing happens when radios with poorly designed AVC try to decode the signal of an AM with 150% pos modulation.
The audio volume gets strangely mangled when the RF level varies and the AVC time constant is too short.
Sounds like a really confused and poorly adjusted compressor/leveler at the station.
If interested I think I have some writings about it by Frank Jones from 1936. I think I just paraphrased the summary.
Tom Wells said:Yes, pitch shifts of only a very few cycles are bothersome to me.
Tom Wells said:It certainly is possible to create a modulating scheme that is "transparent" or seemingly linear in behavior and sound.
Even for something such as controlled carrer.
The point I wished to make is that without standardized timing of AVC circuits, it's going to play differently with all radios.
And some will sound awful. Whether music is aired is important, too.
If there's never musical content, it should be "just fine" and sound like a very high quality CB signal
on a big "linear" amp.
If there is musical content, it's not a question of whether it's going to mangle the sound, it's a question of how much.
Tom Wells said:some radios here that sound fantastic with 200% positive AM asymmetric audio.
Then there are a few where the audio gets all muzzy and clumpy, and sounds like a there's a leaky old wax/paper audio coupling capacitor, which it can't be cause they're the newer radios, not the old tube sets.
Just like dolby systems, it would require a carefully crafted, coordinated encoding/decoding/timing response scheme to be
adopted by all. Engineering isn't done that way anymore.
I don't trust modern engineering to understand or respect analog properly.
Digital development for quite few years seems hell-bent on NOT understanding or respecting analog behavior.
Tom Wells said:The point I wished to make is that without standardized timing of AVC circuits, it's going to play differently with all radios.
And some will sound awful. Whether music is aired is important, too.
If there's never musical content, it should be "just fine" and sound like a very high quality CB signal
on a big "linear" amp.
If there is musical content, it's not a question of whether it's going to mangle the sound, it's a question of how much.