This seems to be one of the most frequent complaints from people who have forked over the extra cost for HD radios. The fact that question even comes up shouts volumes about problematic HD technology.is there a way to disable HD?
SUPERCASTER said:is there a way to disable HD?
This seems to be one of the most frequent complaints from people who have forked over the extra cost for HD radios. The fact that question even comes up shouts volumes about problematic HD technology.
Wasn't one of the (many) promises from the HD promoters that their HD radios could be upgraded as newer features and improvements were added?
clouseau said:SUPERCASTER said:is there a way to disable HD?
This seems to be one of the most frequent complaints from people who have forked over the extra cost for HD radios. The fact that question even comes up shouts volumes about problematic HD technology.
Well at least you got a "Problematic" in there. We'll have to check with Len as to what number that is.
Clouseau
LinoNYC said:Well as you might expect this is one of those digitally tuned receivers that goes mono when you tune it manually and since they didn't know how to pre-set stations they had allways used it this way. T
StephanieNYC said:LinoNYC said:Well as you might expect this is one of those digitally tuned receivers that goes mono when you tune it manually and since they didn't know how to pre-set stations they had allways used it this way. T
I hate FM stereos that automatically blend into Mono.
Then there's the ones that have a "mute" function, where if the signal isn't in stereo, the radio mutes itself. WTF. ???
Tom Wells said:The fact people are even asking for such an option says a lot about the effectiveness of HD.
Would this be less of an issue if there were no HD2 and 3 streams?
Tom Wells said:Maybe there's some point in the circuit where you could tap off at the 10.7 mhz IF and pass the signal to a regular FM detector
in another tuner. That way, you could enjoy the reported excellent Sangean RF stage, minus the undesirable dropouts.
If it's easy enough, there could be a market for add-on detectors, as there was for add-on mpx decoders in the 1960's.
Mike Walker said:The HDT-1x DOES allow you to lock out HD, and there's a very good (though pretty rare in my experience) reason for it. Sometimes a damn station just won't lock! It goes back and forth from analog to digital. ARRGH! Again, it happens rarely, but it's one of those things that makes you want to smash the damn thing against the wall! Hence the inclusion of "lockout" on the newer model.
Chuck said:If you figure out how to do that, please let us know about it. I spent about a half hour with a 100 MHz scope probing around on a HDT-1 and never figured it out. A schematic would have been helpful, but I didn't have one. Some of the traces on the PC board are incredibly small, which makes it hard to probe around without the possibility of blowing the thing up.
But then, I'm just a hobbyist with a soldering iron...
Mike Walker said:The HDT-1x DOES allow you to lock out HD, and there's a very good (though pretty rare in my experience) reason for it. Sometimes a damn station just won't lock! It goes back and forth from analog to digital. ARRGH! Again, it happens rarely, but it's one of those things that makes you want to smash the damn thing against the wall! Hence the inclusion of "lockout" on the newer model.