oaktree said:
Why is this that Canadian regulatory commissions equal to our FCC have done everything in its power to allow AM radio stations move to FM and they are, by the droves. Don't use the defense that there are more frequencies available, hence, more space. The FM dial in the Dominion is filling fast across a country much smaller than the US population wise.
Canada always had a very different regulatory stance than the US. While the FCc allowed all stations that fit int he band to be licensed, Canada required new applicants to do economic impact studies so no market would be driven to unprofitability or inability to meet service requirements. This is why, at the peak number of stations, canada had only a handful of daytimers, and most stations were of significant power; markets that by population would have had 12 to 15 AMs in the US had 5 or 6 in Canada.
When it came time to consider moving most stations to FM, there were both few AMs in any market to move, and fewer FMs already operating in the market.
There is no comparison with the US because Canada protected the profitability and viability of its stations always. Yet now, the move to FM is based on the fact that many, many Canadian AMs were losing money because the audience had moved to FM.
Not that rural America doesn't know of or understand FM. They do. But many just don't have it, get it or, really, care about it, unless it's an absolute necessity for them.
If you look at most small markets, they now have more FMs than AMs, and, generally, the FMs have better coverage in the areas surrounding the central town.
Traverse City, MI, is a good example. In the 60's, it had one Class IV AM that barely covered the city, and did not cover the trade area including Leelanau, Benzie, Kalkaska and Antrim counties at night, and one high-band daytimer, that, similarly, did not make it much more than 15 to 20 miles in any direction. Today, the "metro" has 11 FMs, most Class C's, which cover the full extent of the trade area.
Or Lake City, FL. Previously, it had a Cass IV on 1340 that did not cover even the home county due to condutivity, and a directional 1 kw station on 960. Today, there are 5 local FMs and several more from Live Oak, all covering the two-county trade area.
These are both markets that in the 60's were barely 20,000 in population, and severely underserved by the deficient AM allocations of the time. At many times, in both markets, there were no listenable daytime signals in parts of the trade area, and at night much of the area had no local service and erratic service from distant towns in other states.
AM IS good for what it can serve better than FM.
What can AM serve better than AM? Neither band has a monopoly on service or localism. AM is much more susceptable to interference, static, summer lightning and auroral conditions, etc. FM is blocked by hills or mountains, and can have multipath problems. In other owrds, both have some defects... but the majority of FMs cover more than the AMs in the same market.
And just how many iBiquity licenses at $25,000 a pop do you thing small AM broadcasters are going to pony-up to make the shift to HD?
You exaggerate.
I am truly impressed and energized by the number of posters here who believe in AM radio with all their heart and who have succeeded through years of what were probably difficult times to gain a small "piece of the rock." The thing is, though, that there are many who aren't and we're not the shoe store down the block that will just simply have a "going out of business sale" and just give up.
The real problem is not your "sob story" about the small station owners. It is the fact that as each year goes by, there are fewer people who accept the sound of AM and who will listen to anything on the band. As time goes on, AM is running out of listeners.
These will be difficult times in the near years to come. People moving to our communities aren't moving here just from AM only markets. They know the score better than the generations before it. The fact is, today, people aren't as aware about AM as they are any station that makes a huge effort to SERVE its community at all costs.
There aren't any "AM Only" markets. There are 4,800 AM staitons, and 8,000 FM staitons. Obviously, there are more FMs in more places than there are AMs. And the average FM covers much more than the average AM.
THAT'S where the saving grace of AM is today, tomorrow and forever. Serving the community with local, relative and viable service.
So no FM serves its market? Interesting. I did not know that the system of modulation prevented serving the community on an FM.