AM stereo sounded alot better with Kahn than C-Quam. The range was better hands down. iBOC has advantages but just as with the FM, by the time you get in range for the HD version, the reception for the anologue is more dependable and just as good to the average listener.
C-Quam decision was political in nature. It was not based on technical or listener advantages. Politics trumps everything.
Platform motion along with the dedicated uninterupted pulse requirements made C the 80's version of the HD reception that we experience today.
I picked up WNNNBC in Kahn stereo and after they went C as WFAN. I did a comparision between WRBQ and WSUN. There was no comparision. Kahn was superior in listenability.
Static in Stereo? Yep. Like Sarnoff said...
Go under a bridge, you lose the signal in stereo and mono. With Kahn it stays, C goes away and is percivably annoying listening to it come back several seconds later.
The FCC never wanted AM Stereo. They moved FM and made useless all the receivers of the time.
The marketplace just wants something that is pleasing to the ear. Sometimes that is silence. (ouch!)
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
C-Quam decision was political in nature. It was not based on technical or listener advantages. Politics trumps everything.
Platform motion along with the dedicated uninterupted pulse requirements made C the 80's version of the HD reception that we experience today.
I picked up WNNNBC in Kahn stereo and after they went C as WFAN. I did a comparision between WRBQ and WSUN. There was no comparision. Kahn was superior in listenability.
Static in Stereo? Yep. Like Sarnoff said...
Go under a bridge, you lose the signal in stereo and mono. With Kahn it stays, C goes away and is percivably annoying listening to it come back several seconds later.
The FCC never wanted AM Stereo. They moved FM and made useless all the receivers of the time.
The marketplace just wants something that is pleasing to the ear. Sometimes that is silence. (ouch!)
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!