You absolutely scored big here!Scored on eBay. Looks like a Motorola engineer built it to show off the C-Quam system and demonstrate how an existing receiver could be modified to add an AM Stereo decoder. The radio they chose is a TRF design famous for its DXing capability.
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How so? So he can listen to AM stereo stations playing music that don't exist?You absolutely scored big here!![]()
I have my own. There are low-power Part 15 (-ish) AM Stereo transmitters you can buy or make yourself, or you can use the sample output of a C-Quam exciter:How so? So he can listen to AM stereo stations playing music that don't exist?
Great. Wouldn't a set of earbuds and your phone be more convenient?I have my own. There are low-power Part 15 (-ish) AM Stereo transmitters you can buy or make yourself, or you can use the sample output of a C-Quam exciter:
Not when you're a Millennial luddite like me and only use a flip phone.Great. Wouldn't a set of earbuds and your phone be more convenient?
Plenty of AMs running stereo playing music.. WYLD AM 940 in New Orleans is 10kw day and though it's religious format,its in stereo and has listeners who love it..AM stereo is richer than FM stereo IMPO..most people don't miss audio above 10k..not much energy there to make a difference. Just because you obviously don't like it doesn't mean it doesn't work or isn't on air...How so? So he can listen to AM stereo stations playing music that don't exist?
I think I saw a buggy whip on EBay recently. That would be an equal score!
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Are the majority of their listeners listening in AM stereo? Of course not. They're little ol' ladies who don't know what AM stereo is.Plenty of AMs running stereo playing music.. WYLD AM 940 in New Orleans is 10kw day and though it's religious format,its in stereo and has listeners who love it
Most AM rolls off well below 10kHz. If you can't hear frequencies above 5kHz, you seriously need a hearing checkup...AM stereo is richer than FM stereo IMPO..most people don't miss audio above 10k.
That's more silliness. AM stereo never got started, and has been over for decades. To suggest anything other that enough radio nerds that can be counted on one hand actually care? Borders on delusional..not much energy there to make a difference. Just because you obviously don't like it doesn't mean it doesn't work or isn't on air...
As it relates to AM stereo? Well, let's see.. Back in the day, I've installed one Magnavox AM stereo system, five Motorola systems, and one Kahn system. I removed the Magnavox after about six months once testing was completed, and four of the five Motorola systems after it was determined they were more of a hindrance than a benefit. The Kahn system later became a Powerside, but it also proved to be a PITA than it was worth and was removed when I became chief of the station.What have you done?
There was an LG flip phone I had for nearly a decade, and to my amusement (at the time), it had a fast 3G internet, a camera (meh on quality), downloadable games including SimCity, and at the time, emojis were just beginning to roll out. It did not, in fact, have earbuds. Of course, it's amazing what I can do with my touch-screen phone today, but I will always miss the flip phone. At least, this phone has a headphone Jack, since the newer phones are taking it away again.Not when you're a Millennial luddite like me and only use a flip phone.
I still have one and it worked good on CQUAM and Kahn stations.Sort of related:
I bought a new Sony SRF-A100 (multi system AM stereo radio in late 1984), although WHB and WDAF (and KSIS and WLS) were all broadcasting AM stereo, my particular Sony radio never had a stereo effect from these stations regardless of the switch setting (FM stereo worked fine, it wasn't an amp/speaker problem).
Anyone with this model of radio have this problem?
(a few years later I bought a Radio Shack [C-QUAM] AM stereo "component" home radio and Sony SRF-42 AM/FM stereo radio)
Kirk Bayne
The SRF-A100 is a "forced stereo" receiver, so in AM ST mode, you should hear it trying to decode the signal in stereo regardless if the station is actually broadcasting in stereo or not. A neat trick is to switch it into Kahn mode on a signal squeezed in between two others. Adjacent-channel interference on the lower sideband will be heard in the left channel and interference on the upper sideband will be heard on the right channel. A station transmitting Kahn Power-Side (if any of those are left?) will be heard mostly in one channel.Sort of related:
I bought a new Sony SRF-A100 (multi system AM stereo radio in late 1984), although WHB and WDAF (and KSIS and WLS) were all broadcasting AM stereo, my particular Sony radio never had a stereo effect from these stations regardless of the switch setting (FM stereo worked fine, it wasn't an amp/speaker problem).