1070 in LA is CBS.
My bad.
Except for KFI, the rest have very little listening.
AM Radio has very little listening.
1070 in LA is CBS.
> Then he must have a learning disability or work for a dealer of entry-level cars because virtually all high-level cars
And that is the thing HD advocates always say - but comparatively few auto sales nationwide are high-level because most people can't afford a car that costs as much as a small house. Nevertheless, I did a quick survey of GM, Ford, and Chrysler web sites and HD radio appears to be at least an option you can buy. That gives HD a ray of hope. But unless it is standard equipment, it is unlikely that consumers will preferentially pay for it. OEM car audio systems have been horribly overpriced for years, given the sticker shock it is more likely that people will economize on less expensive options. The way cars are displayed in dealerships, you pretty much have a hodgepodge of cars with different colors and options. I sometimes wonder how much input the dealer has into what Detroit ships them. If the system is standard, and it works, people will use it and HD FM has a chance. But if it doesn't work - game over. Because consumers won't tolerate unreliability and will give up after a few seconds.
> I have talked with several car salesmen and they all admit that customers don't specifically ask for digital radio, rather their interests run to MP3 and USB players with sat radio almost being a given these days. I would call that priority, not apathy.
Or worse - to them digital radio means satellite.
> Unlike the other terrible products you mention the Edsel was a good product (essentially an upgraded Mercury) but introduced at exactly the wrong time. While digital radio is a partially flawed product, especially the AM version, it does work well under certain conditions. Like the Edsel though it provides only an insignificant upgrade to the product line.
Agreed about the Edsel - it is perception that matters in most cases.
> I have yet to meet anyone who is distressed his/her car has a whip antenna. I really doubt this is a determining factor in car selection.
Most new cars don't have one. It is probably more automakers than buyers who don't want one. When shopping for my latest vehicle, I selected one in part because it had a real whip antenna. Because the other stuff doesn't work.
> An indoor antenna can work as effectively in most metro areas where digital radio is prevalent.
Houston is a metro area with class C stations. The best indoor antenna made - the Godar with actual GAIN over a dipole is ineffective at getting at least two local HD stations. it takes an outdoor antenna - something most consumers either can't or won't do for FM HD.
> The opinions I've read dealing with the non-acceptance of C-Quam have more to do with the general demise of AM than C-Quam specifically. By the time C-Quam came along music radio had moved to FM. C-Quam became a technology that was no longer needed and, as it required a new radio, was rejected by the public.
Agreed - AM has moved to the trivialities of talk and sports and foreign.
If FM moves in that direction - then consumers will abandon FM because it no longer has compelling format. However, as much as I distain talk radio, it does seem to keep high power AM stations in large markets towards the top of the ratings. So speculation about the demise of AM is, for the moment, premature.
My bad.
Except for KFI, the rest have very little listening.
AM Radio has very little listening.
Or worse - to them digital radio means satellite.
Agreed - AM has moved to the trivialities of talk and sports and foreign.
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They are not "left to die"...but HD sub-channels are by their very nature a place for formats that cannot command their own analog/main channel...either in terms of audience or revenue.
If you worked in radio, you might see those. Or your station might have done them for your company.
Yeah, that's it. Those major broadcasters CC, CBS, Citadel, Etc.....are all trembling under pressure from the big bad iBiquity. None of them understand HD like you on an anonymous message board filled withy hobbyiusts and DX-ers.
There is no way broadcasters are going to turn off the ability to have extra streams of programming.
There is no finish line. Just like when automakers started making FM a 'stock' item...that led to universal usage.
You can't save AM...PERIOD.....it's in a death spiral.
Reality again? Most new cars come with HD now. Every automaker is including it.
This is a better strategy than concentrating on getting HD into individual radios at Best Buy...as no one goes into Best Buy to buy a 'radio' anymore.
No, "satellite" means satellite. Pandora and iHeart and Uforia mean digital radio.
In my neck of the woods Pandora and iHeart mean "Internet radio". Almost nobody but me uses the term digital radio.
And that is the thing HD advocates always say - but comparatively few auto sales nationwide are high-level because most people can't afford a car that costs as much as a small house. Nevertheless, I did a quick survey of GM, Ford, and Chrysler web sites and HD radio appears to be at least an option you can buy. That gives HD a ray of hope. But unless it is standard equipment, it is unlikely that consumers will preferentially pay for it. OEM car audio systems have been horribly overpriced for years, given the sticker shock it is more likely that people will economize on less expensive options.
The way cars are displayed in dealerships, you pretty much have a hodgepodge of cars with different colors and options. I sometimes wonder how much input the dealer has into what Detroit ships them. If the system is standard, and it works, people will use it and HD FM has a chance. But if it doesn't work - game over. Because consumers won't tolerate unreliability and will give up after a few seconds.
Or worse - to them digital radio means satellite.
Most new cars don't have one. It is probably more automakers than buyers who don't want one. When shopping for my latest vehicle, I selected one in part because it had a real whip antenna. Because the other stuff doesn't work.
Houston is a metro area with class C stations. The best indoor antenna made - the Godar with actual GAIN over a dipole is ineffective at getting at least two local HD stations. it takes an outdoor antenna - something most consumers either can't or won't do for FM HD.
Most of Phoenix's radio and TV stations all transmit from a mountain about 1,800 feet over the desert plain. Unless your antenna is at the eastern end of the lateral ridge of those mountains you have no trouble receiving those stations. Some are located down in the city proper (mostly AM's) and, with only a couple of exceptions, are not receivable or full of static particularly at night. I believe Houston is as flat as Phoenix but don't remember any high places to put a transmitter. That is most likely your problem - insufficient HAAT.
The bulk of Houston's Full C's are on the Senior Road tower, which is 2000 feet tall. Higher than the South Mountain sites, which at roughly 1600' to 1800' also has shadowing caused by the mountain itself as well as other hills like Camelback throughout the PHX metro. A few not on the Senior Road facility are also on very high towers. And there are no significant terrain obstructions... unlike Phoenix.
And a lot of the Phoenix FMs are not on South Mountain. There is a big collection on Radio Mountain SSW of Prescott, and some come from the east as far away as Globe or the west (see the Buckey COL station).
Among the local FMs "home to market" not on South mountain are KQMR, KLVK, KLNZ, KAJM, KNRJ, KMVA, KVIB, KKFT, KCDX and KRDE as well as KDVA, KVVA, KRPH, KHOT, KEXX, KSWG, KOMR, KPHF, KNAI and KHOV.
Is it significant that many of these are Spanish language (or Latino programming) and direct their signals to the west and southwest Valley?
They lock in fine for me.
We've already established that you have a crappy radio to begin. That's a non-starter.
The major groups helped capitalize iBiquity when there was a fear of digital and satellite. They were stakeholders, and had a vested interest.
That's why nearly no broadcaster has HD gear on the auxiliary transmitter, and unless they "feed" a translator, are often off the air, have big empty holes or worse.
You have that backwards. Automakers started putting FM in as standard gear because buyers demanded it,
The big signal AMs are very much alive, and will be for many years. This is not a one or two year decline... it's a 5 to 10 year decline.
First, were all cars to come with HD, it would take 10 years to get just half the cars on the road to have HD.
Second, only about a third of all listening takes place in the car.
[
But now it's there...and they are not closing up shop.
But...it's not going away. Boradcasters are not going to part with the ability to send out an additional stream of audio.
No, I don't have it backwards...it's a snowball effect. When people demanded it, Detroit put it in cars....and FM got more listeners/samplers...and more people demanded it, etc., etc.
So, you can fortell the future?
There are a few big AM's in every market with big signals...and holding onto a format that benefits them. The rest are on life-support.
It's one of the few places "new radios" are being used. And it's also the place where people discover new stations.
You don't know how long the VC's that put the money in iBiquity will wait. It can't be making money, and the burn capital has to be running low.
You don't know how long the VC's that put the money in iBiquity will wait.
When Detroit started making FM standard on most models, FM was at parity with AM for overall listening.
No, but I can do a business model with multi-year projections quite well.
There are not a few big AMs in every market.
However, there are many niche options for the lesser AMs. Not, to be sure, ratings driven, but profitable ones.
And those options will continue strong as they give voices to communities and faith groups.
Most of the buyers of cars with HD are unaware of the fact that they have the capability.
Class A & B1 really need the whole 10dB digital signal to have a chance, in my opinion, but nobody wants to spend a penny more on iBiquity hardware.
Nor do you. But the fact that it it opens up more choices on the dial, allows more streams of programming over the air, owned by the same operators. I don't think anyone is in a hurry....
This was a process over a few years...so I don't think you can make such a cut and dry statement. A helped B....B helped A. Add the element of 'N' (time.
Every major[/] market. I thought we were on the same page.
Is it about profit...or is it about getting more people to listen? Sure, Salem takes over an AM property...makes money...but gives listeners another reason to leave AM behind as the programming is neither relevant or compelling to the masses.
So what? My father had an FM in his car for years and never knew it.