Carmine5 said:Obviously, when enough money is involved, the agency will move heaven and earth to accommodate.
Are you saying that Sirius has more money than the NAB? I don't think so.
Carmine5 said:Obviously, when enough money is involved, the agency will move heaven and earth to accommodate.
TheBigA said:Carmine5 said:Obviously, when enough money is involved, the agency will move heaven and earth to accommodate.
Are you saying that Sirius has more money than the NAB? I don't think so.
Carmine5 said:TheBigA said:Carmine5 said:Obviously, when enough money is involved, the agency will move heaven and earth to accommodate.
Are you saying that Sirius has more money than the NAB? I don't think so.
I'm not talking about who has the most money here, OK? I'm talking about transactions in general in which a great deal of money involved.
It can be the satrad merger, involving over 500 million dollars, or the Clear Channel buyout which involved billions.
OKCRadioGuy said:If the big boys want to have their noisemakers louder
Savage said:In fact there is a body of opinion saying 10db wouldn't even make a dramatic difference.
Savage said:Carmine, I'm not sure, but you could be right that the 10db FM digital level "will breeze through the Commission" (although this proposition has far more opposition than anything else associated with HD thus far.)
I still predict that -10db will not be widely adopted, even if it gets the FCC green light. It will cost too much for any stations other than big-group owned major-market signals, introduce too much self-interference and will spark adjacent-channel interference litigation. This ain't AM. There are far bigger bucks at stake for first and second-adjacent operators. This time the aggrieved parties won't sit on the sidelines because of potential $200K legal bills. They'll go for it because the economic injuries will be a multiple of those documentable in AM cases.
HD-FM boosters have drawn a line in the sand, essentially saying, "HD is toast if we don't get the 10db digital." (See RW 8/1.) So guess what that means? By definition, HD is toast, because the most likely outcome is more like an increase to 3 to 6db in most cases, not enough to fix the coverage problems. In fact there is a body of opinion saying 10db wouldn't even make a dramatic difference.
Carmine5 said:Whether it's the FCC or the NAB, but it seems like small market broadcasters are continually getting the short end of the antenna.
Small market radio stations can install IBOC. They can inject 10%. They can pretty much do anything big radio stations can do. In fact, based on the sales data I see, they probably can afford it better.
Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:SO, how will the LPFM's and the college stations be able afford IBOC, never mind 10% injection? At $100,000 a pop, be real.
TheBigA said:Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:SO, how will the LPFM's and the college stations be able afford IBOC, never mind 10% injection? At $100,000 a pop, be real.
My response was about "small market radio stations." Many college stations have already installed IBOC.
I wonder if LPFM stations even have enough room to do IBOC.