Link to Seattle-Tacoma board:No wonder adjacent stations elsewhere in the country are complaining about HD AM!
http://www.radio-info.com/smf/index.php/topic,92606.msg708165.html#msg708165
Link to Seattle-Tacoma board:No wonder adjacent stations elsewhere in the country are complaining about HD AM!
KB1OKL said:Yup, AM IBOC is terrible, I just drove back and forth to Burlington, VT tonight about a 4 hour trip from here, and was trying to listen to Coast to Coast on WABC 770 and got buzzed out several times from WBBM 780 believe it or not, but because it is so ahem... so prominent on AM at night I just hit scan and usually it was found on another station within about 2 seconds, at least it is an interesting show sometimes. I also listened to CHWO 740 for a lot of the trip, great station, played swing, jump, rock a billy and 50's and 60's rock n roll until midnight, quite a good mix.
Skywave is AM's last saving grace, I cannot for the life of me figure out why AM broadcasters would not care about it and trample other stations. You don't have to be a DXer to listen easily half way accross the country at night.
R.F. Burns said:KB1OKL said:Yup, AM IBOC is terrible, I just drove back and forth to Burlington, VT tonight about a 4 hour trip from here, and was trying to listen to Coast to Coast on WABC 770 and got buzzed out several times from WBBM 780 believe it or not, but because it is so ahem... so prominent on AM at night I just hit scan and usually it was found on another station within about 2 seconds, at least it is an interesting show sometimes. I also listened to CHWO 740 for a lot of the trip, great station, played swing, jump, rock a billy and 50's and 60's rock n roll until midnight, quite a good mix.
Skywave is AM's last saving grace, I cannot for the life of me figure out why AM broadcasters would not care about it and trample other stations. You don't have to be a DXer to listen easily half way accross the country at night.
The highlighted sentence alone shows you don't know a thing about commercial broadcasting. Stations don't seel their skywave signal. Stations in the US survive by selling air time. While large market stations depend on agency sales those advertisers still want to regionalize their advertisements. The new method of network radio sales distribution is to sell spots on a market by market basis. For instance, if you sell GM, the spot run in LA would be different than the spot run in San Francisco and that spot is different than the spot run in Portland and on and on. The days of a single spot serving the entire country are coming to an end. With that in mind, what good is it for a sponsor of a station in Chicago to have their spot heard in Pittsburgh. Radio is a business, not a hobby and unless you can earn a profit from it, you will go out of business. DXing and AM radio are going the way of silent pictures. Sure some older folks and DXers might have fond memories but they aren't relevent in todays marketplace.
KB1OKL said:I understand what you're saying but I'm speaking from a consumer's perspective.
It just seems like radio is doing everything wrong, Canada for example is moving many of their AM stations to FM (not digital) which to my mind is crazy because you lose the range. I thought it was great driving all that way and being able to listen to the same station, I know they have no immediate plans to move CHWO though. I was not DXing last night I was being entertained both by CHWO and Coast to Coast.
Consumers couldn't care less about commercials in fact hate them so I would think radio would do things to attract more listeners not repel them.
I know the bloc of 350 ads in a row makes me turn the station off every time and I usually don't go back to it.
(or turn it way down so I don't have to listen to them) . Radio is doing everything to cut the range and/or jam adjacents with IBOC and Canada is moving many of their AM's to FM which also cuts the range, but at the same time stations are now accessible on the internet worldwide, which approach is ultimately going to be successful? It would be a different story if local stations had local content but 99.9% of them don't, so why local commercials? I think somethings is backwards here. I don't think self serving is the answer.
clouseau said:KB1OKL said:I understand what you're saying but I'm speaking from a consumer's perspective.
Actually, YOU'RE NOT.
You're speaking from a DXers standpoint. I understand you and hear you, but you are NOT "Speaking from a consumer's perspective". You are speakling from a Sub Sub Sub Sub Subset of AM radio listeners - The DXer. You are NOT the typical consumer perspective. Not even tangientially related. You must understand that if you are ever to see what is going on. (Whether you agree with it or not).
OK, well then from your definition everyone that drives down the highway and hits scan on their AM radio at night is a DXer
It just seems like radio is doing everything wrong, Canada for example is moving many of their AM stations to FM (not digital) which to my mind is crazy because you lose the range. I thought it was great driving all that way and being able to listen to the same station, I know they have no immediate plans to move CHWO though. I was not DXing last night I was being entertained both by CHWO and Coast to Coast.
You are out of the listening area. You are a DXER. I will credit you for your steadfast claiming that listening to programming instead of pulling a station out of the grass is not DXing, but CHWO barely reaches Watertown, NY at night with out DX.
YOU'RE JUST WRONG HERE. You are a DXER.
Consumers couldn't care less about commercials in fact hate them so I would think radio would do things to attract more listeners not repel them.
Not trying to be mean, but this CLEARLY shows why you do not understand the economics of radio. I can understand that. You are a licensed radio AMATEUR. (As am I)
You just do not understand that radio owners do not have a day job like you and I, that funds their "Hobby". They gotta pay for it. No one at a commercial station should be selling Kenmores at Sears so you can get no commercials. That will NOT get good programming.
I do know there has to be commercials of course but there has got to be a better way than these clusters
I know the bloc of 350 ads in a row makes me turn the station off every time and I usually don't go back to it.
Well since virtually every radio station in the country has stopsets that have multiple commercials, I would suspect you would have run out of stations a long time ago if your "usually don't go back to it" statement was true.
What I meant by that was that I will just hit scan until I find something interesting like people have done for years, it is just worse nowadays with the "stopsets" as you call them, I will eventually of course come back to that station, I do not black ball stations because they play commercials, just that when I hear one come on I know there will be about 10 more after that, so why waste my time?
(or turn it way down so I don't have to listen to them) . Radio is doing everything to cut the range and/or jam adjacents with IBOC and Canada is moving many of their AM's to FM which also cuts the range, but at the same time stations are now accessible on the internet worldwide, which approach is ultimately going to be successful? It would be a different story if local stations had local content but 99.9% of them don't, so why local commercials? I think somethings is backwards here. I don't think self serving is the answer.
I'm sure you think you have this all worked out. I'll tell you the same thing I tell all the teenagers Move out before your parents values corrupt you.
Last night when the barrage of local commercials came on Coast to Coast was the time I turned it down, one commercial at a time is OK, 5, 7? not for me.
In the meantime...
Sit back, have a colortini and watch the pictures and sounds fly through the air.
I quit colortinis many years ago ;D
Or maybe you could try and tune in New Zealand. It's all equally relevant. None of this has much to do with commercial radio.
Not mean... Honest.
Clouseau.
JohnnyElectron said:"Those who don't study history, are doomed to repeat it" - this is true not only for politicians, but for engineers.
You may recall 70 years ago it was CFRB getting smoked at night by the 500KW adjacent WLW that caused the FCC to revoke WLW's half-million watts, and nothing else. Even when WLW went to a directional antenna, it was just too much for the first adjacent CFRB. Now CFRB has moved on the dial, but is still next to USA Clears.
CFRB could shutdown the two (or four) adjacents' IBOC that are infringing on its signal with IBOC buzz at night (and/or day).
clouseau said:KB1OKL said:I understand what you're saying but I'm speaking from a consumer's perspective.
Actually, YOU'RE NOT.
You're speaking from a DXers standpoint. I understand you and hear you, but you are NOT "Speaking from a consumer's perspective". You are speakling from a Sub Sub Sub Sub Subset of AM radio listeners - The DXer. You are NOT the typical consumer perspective. Not even tangientially related. You must understand that if you are ever to see what is going on. (Whether you agree with it or not).
It just seems like radio is doing everything wrong, Canada for example is moving many of their AM stations to FM (not digital) which to my mind is crazy because you lose the range. I thought it was great driving all that way and being able to listen to the same station, I know they have no immediate plans to move CHWO though. I was not DXing last night I was being entertained both by CHWO and Coast to Coast.
You are out of the listening area. You are a DXER. I will credit you for your steadfast claiming that listening to programming instead of pulling a station out of the grass is not DXing, but CHWO barely reaches Watertown, NY at night with out DX.
YOU'RE JUST WRONG HERE. You are a DXER.
Consumers couldn't care less about commercials in fact hate them so I would think radio would do things to attract more listeners not repel them.
Not trying to be mean, but this CLEARLY shows why you do not understand the economics of radio. I can understand that. You are a licensed radio AMATEUR. (As am I)
You just do not understand that radio owners do not have a day job like you and I, that funds their "Hobby". They gotta pay for it. No one at a commercial station should be selling Kenmores at Sears so you can get no commercials. That will NOT get good programming.
I know the bloc of 350 ads in a row makes me turn the station off every time and I usually don't go back to it.
Well since virtually every radio station in the country has stopsets that have multiple commercials, I would suspect you would have run out of stations a long time ago if your "usually don't go back to it" statement was true.
(or turn it way down so I don't have to listen to them) . Radio is doing everything to cut the range and/or jam adjacents with IBOC and Canada is moving many of their AM's to FM which also cuts the range, but at the same time stations are now accessible on the internet worldwide, which approach is ultimately going to be successful? It would be a different story if local stations had local content but 99.9% of them don't, so why local commercials? I think somethings is backwards here. I don't think self serving is the answer.
I'm sure you think you have this all worked out. I'll tell you the same thing I tell all the teenagers Move out before your parents values corrupt you.
In the meantime...
Sit back, have a colortini and watch the pictures and sounds fly through the air.
Or maybe you could try and tune in New Zealand. It's all equally relevant. None of this has much to do with commercial radio.
Not mean... Honest.
Clouseau.