It's great to reminisce and all, but the fact remains unless you have receiver manufacturers on board with producing quality synthesized radios (I know that is an oxymoron), then you can be broadcasting the best Amplititude Modulation (okay another oxymoron) AM stereo Hi-FI whatever signal on the planet, and no average consumer could tell.
Granted, C-Quam sounded better than mono AM in theory, but the fact remains that 3-5kHz high end is pretty poor listening response. The only people that would enjoy the sound are oldsters like us who grew up on AM, and frankly we don't even register on the consumer electronic folks nor advertising executives radar. And no, young people aren't going to comb fleamarkets to find the few Sony AM stereo radios only to hear Glen Beck in mono with spots in glorious stereo (10dB separation). They're plugged into their IPods with 50Hz -20kHz reponse and 60+ dB separation. If you don't think the average person can hear that differrence, then you're completely in denial.
Look I hate to piss in your punchbowl, but the fact is we're living in the fading days of AM folks. As more of us get older and die off, so goes AM listening.
Granted, C-Quam sounded better than mono AM in theory, but the fact remains that 3-5kHz high end is pretty poor listening response. The only people that would enjoy the sound are oldsters like us who grew up on AM, and frankly we don't even register on the consumer electronic folks nor advertising executives radar. And no, young people aren't going to comb fleamarkets to find the few Sony AM stereo radios only to hear Glen Beck in mono with spots in glorious stereo (10dB separation). They're plugged into their IPods with 50Hz -20kHz reponse and 60+ dB separation. If you don't think the average person can hear that differrence, then you're completely in denial.
Look I hate to piss in your punchbowl, but the fact is we're living in the fading days of AM folks. As more of us get older and die off, so goes AM listening.