R
rbrucecarter5
Guest
FFoti1 said:You've busted no myth. Where is YOUR test data to support your claim? Anyone can make idle chat about tech-specs. I saw the test results, as well as the test bed. Some of the best broadcast engineers in the business were involved, and they did so without bias.
I can tell you, since all 40+ radios sat in my office for a year, that there were many top-of-the-line models included. All receivers were measured, and broken into three groups, based upon performance. From there, further testing, and research was performed.
Calling your bluff:
Bratz radio / lamp / clock: model MGA 260844
Mary Kate and Ashley: model MKA12
Ultronic: model RR9901
I can get you a lot more model numbers, this was two minutes walking around the house and looking in the junk bin.
All cheap junk - the type kids go for, the type you find in dollar stores, given away for promotions, bargains at Walmart.
I can see the error made in your test methodology - you looked for high quality AM radios, when most people don't give a ___ about AM. I found as many models of cheap promotional stuff that didn't even have AM capability. I found several of those little scanning radios that don't even have a manual tuning knob. Just a volume control, scan button, reset button, and flashlight.
It is possible that "top of the line" models still use the old "three IF can" reference design, old reference designs die hard. But that is probably because there were fewer price constraints on a "top of the line" model. 5 minutes scanning semiconductor sites - and I came up with three reference designs - all minor variations of what I described originally. I found that ALL the old "three IF can" reference designs and the IC's that went with them are discontinued, not recommended for new design, etc. Maybe they can still be built in new radios, but the manufacturer would be doing lifetime buys, or buying from NTE! The new low part count reference designs (NOT IBOC) are the future of radio - get used to THAT!!! Unless you can find me some reference designs from semiconductor manufacturers that do AM right - I sure couldn't find any. In fact, I found a data sheet from Silicon Labs that has NO external components at all - one IC - AM ferrite bar - DONE. They even talk about using a PC board loop antenna to get rid of the ferrite bar. And they are NOT making an HD chip, but their chip DOES support RDS. So much for getting better performance by putting in better ceramic filters, they even eliminate the ceramic filters and tuning capacitor. Since they are right up the road from San Antonio, some of your high pressure marketing types better get up there and convince them - because if I had the design responsibility for a cheap radio, and faced with the 3 can design, the IC that needs tuning caps and ceramic filters, and the single chip - I'd go single chip every time. Better reliabilty - smaller. If that chip has HD in it, fine, if not - well the consumers don't care at this point anyway.
Reseach - with 41 hand picked people from Ibiquity no doubt. I am sorry, but the moment somebody from Ibiquity and early adopters of IBOC started saying that AM bandwidth should be reduced to lower interference - the credibility level was gone. It is too self serving to lower the playing field of all AM audio, justify it by "studies" done with "typical" radios show they don't have bandwidth anyway, etc. Its snake oil to me - without even trying hard I found three cheap junky AM radios with wide bandwidth (because they ARE cheap).
I don't have the time to go do tests on them at work - nobody is paying me for it. But when I can't hear a local 620 because of splatter from a local 660 - it is pretty obvious they are wide band. And - unfortunately - self jam on IBOC. Its real - and you guys better come up with a way around it or nobody will listen to a static filled mess.