Pardon my placing the mantle of actual industry experience with Kahn-Hazeltine AM stereo system on my shoulders in public fashion: I worked with the system when it was being used on an experimental basis, where I worked at WWDJ Hacksensack in the early and mid-1970s.
The system sounds Mickey-Mouse to today's technophile industry blog-types, using two radios to tune the separate sidebands. But I can tell you from personal experience that it worked amazingly well. I remember taking a GE tube-type clock radio and a Zenith TransOceanic multiband receiver, tuning them appropriately to 970's 5kw signal arriving from 26 miles away at my house near Harriman State Park.
The stereo image was surprisingly realistic. Tuning was easy, not tricky for the average consumer. Even if the radios weren't particularly well-matched in audio characteristics, it sounded very good. The mono sun was as easily tuned as a conventional AM mono station.
I never actually used a Kahn-licensed AM stereo receiver - just two radios. It worked! And it was fully compatible without the necessity of buying expensive proprietary equipment.
The system sounds Mickey-Mouse to today's technophile industry blog-types, using two radios to tune the separate sidebands. But I can tell you from personal experience that it worked amazingly well. I remember taking a GE tube-type clock radio and a Zenith TransOceanic multiband receiver, tuning them appropriately to 970's 5kw signal arriving from 26 miles away at my house near Harriman State Park.
The stereo image was surprisingly realistic. Tuning was easy, not tricky for the average consumer. Even if the radios weren't particularly well-matched in audio characteristics, it sounded very good. The mono sun was as easily tuned as a conventional AM mono station.
I never actually used a Kahn-licensed AM stereo receiver - just two radios. It worked! And it was fully compatible without the necessity of buying expensive proprietary equipment.