FreddyE1977 said:Perhaps someone on this board will be able to answer this question for me.
I don't yet have an HD radio. A few weeks ago I noticed that whenever my local AM
station which carries ESPN switches into day pattern, their audio quality falls off significantly. (It almost sounds as if you are listening over an old-style analog phone line.) The audio goes back to full-quality when they shift back to night pattern. During the day I notice that if I off-tune slightly from their frequency in either direction, I get a strange whirring sound that resembles a dial-up PC modem. Is this station testing in HD, and is that why their analog audio is so lousy during the day? I have emailed their engineering dept. but no one will answer the question.
The symptoms you describe, indicate your local ESPN AM station has IBOC. It may be terminal, unless given proper, professional engineering attention immediately. However, "resistance is futile" once the iBorg collective assimilates the station.
All listener complaints are ignored. Symptoms like "telephone fidelity" and "buzzing adjacent channels" are proclaimed "impossible", attributed to your insanity, overactive imagination, and malicious intent. The problem is not the station, but YOU, because you have not yet been assimilated by the iBorg collective.
Repeat after me:
"There are no complaints about HD radio, and never have been."
"HD radio always offers perfect reception, unlimited range, under all circumstances, and interference is just your overactive imagination, caused by your insane distress over not having been accepted to be absorbed by the iBorg collective".
"HD radio, is ALWAYS perfect radio".
"Resistance is futile".
Of course the FCC requires all licensees to take listener complaints seriously, so making HD complaints disappear, is a violation of FCC rules. No matter, the iBorg have already absorbed the FCC.
Just say no! Tell all HD stations to "buzz off"!