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Time to reconsider AM stereo?

My friend, DavidEduardo informed us all of this little tidbit:

There are all kinds of very scary and kookie DXers out there insulting, writing nast e-mails and even writing letters to one's supposed "boss" about HD (one of my staff members got several of these, complaining about me!)

Now that is quite possibly the funniest thing you have ever written on a message board, David. So you actually do have a sense of humor! You were joking, right? Right, David? Right?

Yes those DXers are awfully scary and kookie. If I were you, I would stay as far away from them all as I can possibly get. You never know when one of these kookie DXers are going to load up those HD radios with gunpowder and remotely set them up to explode in a dirt pile somewhere. If you were walking by that dirt pile at the time the HD radios exploded, then it would be all over, eh?
 
Yeah, heaven forbid that some kid might listen to an out-of-market station at night and turn into one of those "kooky and scary DX'ers", and then get interested enough in radio to seek a career in the industry... as I did!
 
audioguy said:
Yeah, heaven forbid that some kid might listen to an out-of-market station at night and turn into one of those "kooky and scary DX'ers", and then get interested enough in radio to seek a career in the industry... as I did!
...and that kooky dial position CKLW was able to have in NJ during the 60's when I was growing up!

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
The sad reality is that station owners are no longer in the position to have, nor care about 'blowtorch' AM or clear channel stations anymore. Having a signal that reached well outside the market was mainly for bragging rights or novelty, but now with the continuing slide of AM listening, especially with those under 50, the cost to build or maintain even a 5kW directional AM doesn't pencil out. Owners want to cover the market where their advertisers reside, and could rightfully care less whether you five hundred miles away can hear them or not.

Chances are the large areas of land the AM transmitter site is built on is now more valuable than the radio station itself. This is especially the case with the cost of utility, tower maintenance, and updating the facility over the long haul.

I know there are a lot of you who think the demise of AM DXing is being somehow accelerated by IBOC. I would argue however, that between all the noise being generated by consumer devices, the lack of original programming in which to listen, combined with significant band congestion, the AM band is pretty much going to meet it's demise by simply becoming old and with increasingly less valuable as a business to owners.
 
HowardMBurgers said:
Chances are the large areas of land the AM transmitter site is built on is now more valuable than the radio station itself. This is especially the case with the cost of utility, tower maintenance, and updating the facility over the long haul.

A good case is the former WGMS in DC on 570.

The station was so committed to its classical format that it was the only RKO market that did not put a Bill Drake consulted Top 40 format on the air in the 60's.

But its transmitter land became so valuable that they, more recently, sold it when the price was right. The proceed built a new site, farther outside the District, and left a lot of money over after all was done.

As the real estate market improves, we will find more and more AMs that can't make much money cashing in the land value. Or, as some have already done, going from, let's say, 5 kw day 1 kw night, separate patterns to 2.2 kw non directional day, 180 watts non directional nights... acre or two of land (probably closer inside the market) and you can build it anywhere. The directional might need 6 to 10 acres, strategically placed to aim the signal.
 
Cal Stymes said:
There are all kinds of very scary and kookie DXers out there insulting, writing nasty e-mails and even writing letters to one's supposed "boss" about HD (one of my staff members got several of these, complaining about me!)

Now that is quite possibly the funniest thing you have ever written on a message board, David. So you actually do have a sense of humor! You were joking, right? Right, David? Right?

I was engaging in hyperbole, which in this case is a bit of humor based on reality. (insert favorite cheshire cat grinning emoticon there)

Yes those DXers are awfully scary and kookie.

What is a bit disconcerting is the intensity of passion of some AM DXers. The nastygrams are a reflection of some of them losing touch with reality in a hobby that should have a nice symbiotic relationship with radio. Many DXers don't understand that listeners outside the regular market a station has are not valued by the station. They also object to things like the Bell, Noory et. al. overnight nets by saying "I can get the same thing on 107 different stations..."

When some of them write to anyone who is not vehemently anti-HD, they are offensive and pretty much off on the dark side (where's my laser sword when I need it?). When they write to the "boss" of such a person to say that the person is ruining a radio station, it's even more macabre.

it reminds me of when we made the decision to take SeaCalm off KTNQ, a 50 kw LA station (one that puts a city grade over Pago Pago at night) and the AM stereo fans (those weren't fans, they were industrial strength blowers!) descended on me, the station manager, Cecil Heftel and others. When the ratings went up in the sharper null areas of the pattern, we were vindicated but the AM stereo buffs (shoudda' been buffed and sanded!) continued to rant on some web page for AM stereo.

I'm glad I never made a public statement about Quadraphonic.

If you were walking by that dirt pile at the time the HD radios exploded, then it would be all over, eh?

If I were wearing my full 10 kHz bandwidth flack jacket, it woud do no harm. (Reminds me of when I consulted a station in San Salvador in the early 80's... on a visit, I was given a kevlar vest as I left the airport "just in case." Nothing a DXer can do can match that...)
 
When I growing up as a kid in Arlington, VA., the big N/T station was WMAL. I used to tune in on potential snow days to see if school was cancelled. Now that I've moved back to the area, the AM dial is a vast wasteland. WMAL is riddled with power line and other terestrial noise, plus has nothing but syndicated right-wing talk. Other than a couple Spanish Language talk stations, the only AM worth listening to is WABC out of NYC., but most times I just stay on FM because of all the noise and lack of content.
 
This thread began in August and this is January. With 19 pages it would appear as though something would be ironed out and you guys could submit something to the FCC or a manufacturer of receivers or even the "ailing" car companies. But the truth is, you have missed the real point and just like bad marksmen, you keep missing the target.

The FCC could care less, without enough interest from the owners themselves, the FCC will, for the most part, ignore AM. The have enough to do with trying to straighten up the DTV transition mess and the interference to other services and country complaints. They also want to start or continue the allocations to other services eager to use the freed up bandwidth.
Etc.

The FCC had at least 4 chances to get AM Stereo on the air in bulk. 1960, 1980, 1982, 1993, etc. The politics got in the way each and every time.

Kahn should have been authorized from the get go. Was Leonard difficult to work with? Was his system not quite adequate for the task? I have heard these things and then some. The reality is, we were left with a situation where everybody wanted to make all the money and nobody wanted to share in the responsibilities to make it work. Case in point: one thread indicated that proofs could not be completed correctly and Kahn had suggested the phasor be replaced. Is possible that the phasor being used was compensating for one tower being out of place for the recommended pattern? I'm sure we've all seen situations when the concrete is poured, it dries and is not where it should be - oops! It happens.

When some of you are sold on c-Quam equipment, is it because you felt gratification that the owner went with your recommendation and in the long run, after installing that Motorola or Harris equipment, it went unused? And now you would feel as though you could not justify an added expense to that owner whom so graciously offered that upgrade – even after he had mentioned the other systems? – and now the iBOC/HD/whatever debacle? Stuff happens…

AM can and is still valuable, I listen to 970 from Tampa every day from my home in Sa-ra-so-ta!
On Sunday mornings I listen to WQYK, but not from the same radio. Why? Because the signal is not good. When the owners had the chance to improve the signal, they could not justify it because they were so highly rated at the time and still are. Not so with WRBQ from the same location. Both have been downgraded to C1’s and shortspaced to boot.

The only way to correct this slide is by preparing for the future and what worked in the past and go from there. If it means revisiting what failed, maybe the real reasons were hidden from the original argument.

Hope this helps to put the discussion back on the right track.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta! (brrrr)
 
DavidEduardo said:
But its transmitter land became so valuable that they, more recently, sold it when the price was right. The proceed built a new site, farther outside the District, and left a lot of money over after all was done.

As the real estate market improves, we will find more and more AMs that can't make much money cashing in the land value. Or, as some have already done, going from, let's say, 5 kw day 1 kw night, separate patterns to 2.2 kw non directional day, 180 watts non directional nights... acre or two of land (probably closer inside the market) and you can build it anywhere. The directional might need 6 to 10 acres, strategically placed to aim the signal.

One more reason why it makes more sense to open the 76-88 MHz band to AM licensees, rather than continuing to promote AM IBOC as the "solution". Adopt an open source digital standard to keep receiver costs low, design the system to encourage single frequency networks, set a transition period of 20 years and let station owners decide when to shut down the medium wave transmitter and sell off the land.

This should have been planned from the start, but we may still have an opportunity. Opponents of this proposal (NAB, MSTV, etc.) claim there's not enough vacant spectrum to accommodate the few remaining full service TV stations on channels 5 and 6, but where's the conclusive proof that they couldn't move down to 2, 3, or 4 -- or even UHF? LPTVs and TV translators have much more flexibility to relocate (especially in rural markets) so they are less of a concern.

Opponents also tried to derail this plan by telling us it would violate international agreements, but recently I heard Canada is quite interested in pursuing it.
 
Play Freebird said:
One more reason why it makes more sense to open the 76-88 MHz band to AM licensees, rather than continuing to promote AM IBOC as the "solution". Adopt an open source digital standard to keep receiver costs low, design the system to encourage single frequency networks, set a transition period of 20 years and let station owners decide when to shut down the medium wave transmitter and sell off the land.

Do you really think terrestrial broadcasting based on AM, FM or some derivitive of a discreet channel and transmitter model will be around in 20 years?
 
badjef said:
But the truth is, you have missed the real point and just like bad marksmen, you keep missing the target.

The FCC had at least 4 chances to get AM Stereo on the air in bulk. 1960, 1980, 1982, 1993, etc. The politics got in the way each and every time.

So unless we agree with you we're missing the target? Uh.. I don't think so. When it comes to AM stereo, you're shooting with a cap gun; a little noise and no impact.

AM stereo was dead and buried in 1993. Game over..


badjef said:
Kahn should have been authorized from the get go. Was Leonard difficult to work with? Was his system not quite adequate for the task? I have heard these things and then some.

You heard correctly- and then some. Now add in all the frivolous law suits and you're even closer to the mark.

badjef said:
AM can and is still valuable, I listen to 970 from Tampa every day from my home in Sa-ra-so-ta!

Only for people 50 and older. Don't believe me? Go ask someone in their 20's about when the last time was that they listened to an AM broadcast. My guess is you'll get a blank stare.

Just because you're a radio hobbyest who happens to remember AM stereo, doesn't mean there is a bright future for the AM band. Sorry, that's just the truth.
 
The Kahn system, the very first AM stereo system worked quite well. But, at the time it was in the developmental stages, FM was still the "little red-haired step-child" of broadcasting. In order to give FM a little more of a push, the Zenith FM Stereo (the same system we use today both here and around the world) was approved in 1961. But even then, FM didn't really grow all that much until the 50/50 simulcast rule was put in effect in 1965-66. AM Stereo was put on the back-burner in order to give FM a "fighting chance". FM grew by leaps and bounds until around 1975 when FM listening accounted for at least 50% of total listenership. The young people were getting FM and FM Stereo receivers in droves.

Around that time (1975), the AM tuner sections of those receivers were becoming mere "afterthoughts" of the circuit. By the time the FCC got around to dealing with AM Stereo, the damage had already been done. Lenny Kahn's heart was in the right place, but several other applicants vying for the AM Stereo approval had deeper pockets and continuous research to improve THEIR systems. I supported Kahn in the beginning. But as time went on, I saw that Kahn's litigations only delayed the inevitable ruling. Someone other than Kahn's would be "the standard". The FCC approved the Magnavox system. But faster than you could say "Jack Robinson", the Commission rescinded that ruling and decided "HEY, let's let the marketplace decide!". They basically wiped their hands clean on the matter. Had Kahn accepted "the inevitable" sooner and not dragged the AM Stereo issue into court after court after court, he would have been able to keep the legacy as "the father of AM Stereo radio". Yes, the Motorola C-QUAM system did have the "platform motion" issue. But as time went on, both the exciters and the receivers improved tremendously. It sounds really great, even on skywave. I was happy to put a C-QUAM exciter on the air at WJIB 15 years ago. It sounded great. Many listeners, and yes we had quite a few, had AM Stereo radios. And even those who had (mono) broadband GE Superradios (both II and III) saw the improvement on the high-end after the C-QUAM was installed. It really stood out.

But, the breakdown of the "clears", mandatory NRSC filters (10 kHz), more former daytimers going full-time, Clear Channel's stupid directive that all of their AM's bandwidth would be limited to 5,000 Hz (thanks Randy) and finally IBOC pretty much is sealing AM's fate to the dustbin of broadcasting history. It's a shame too. AM can do so much better than it is now. And this is progress?

Over and out,
-Pete
 
Peter Q. George (K1XRB) said:
In order to give FM a little more of a push, the Zenith FM Stereo (the same system we use today both here and around the world) was approved in 1961. But even then, FM didn't really grow all that much until the 50/50 simulcast rule was put in effect in 1965-66.

FM stereo progressed at an average rate of less than 1 new station per week for two years.

The "Drop Dead" date on simulcasting was in 1967; most stations held off until then... and it affected major markets most severely. What we got was a ton of new FM insturmental stations and a bunch of progressive / free form rock stations.

FM grew by leaps and bounds until around 1975 when FM listening accounted for at least 50% of total listenership.

In fact, it was between late '77 and '78 that national tabulations showed FM at parity. However, there were markets that reached parity and dominance well before, like Miami with stations like WMYQ and then Y-100 moving youth and the famous WLYF and WYOR beautiful music battle. And there were markets that did not change until later... one top 15 market had a 14 share for all FM in 1978; some format changes converted this to over 55% FM by mid-1979.

The young people were getting FM and FM Stereo receivers in droves.

By the mid-70's, the most successful FMs were the 35+ targeted Bea<utiful Music stations... Shulke, Bonneville, FM 100 and all the rest of the syndicators had well over 1000 of these going and getting huge ratings. The first WJIB with Pete Taylor at the helm is one you might recognize!

But, the breakdown of the "clears", mandatory NRSC filters (10 kHz), more former daytimers going full-time, Clear Channel's stupid directive that all of their AM's bandwidth would be limited to 5,000 Hz (thanks Randy) and finally IBOC pretty much is sealing AM's fate to the dustbin of broadcasting history. It's a shame too. AM can do so much better than it is now. And this is progress?

Add in all the extra stations and "portable transmitters" that Docket 80-90 created... even on AM. The real culprit, as you mentioned in a part I edited out, has been receiver design decline. Randy's dictate was in response to testing how AM's sounded best on a variety of K-Mart and WalMart radios...
 
HowardMBurgers said:
badjef said:
But the truth is, you have missed the real point and just like bad marksmen, you keep missing the target.

The FCC had at least 4 chances to get AM Stereo on the air in bulk. 1960, 1980, 1982, 1993, etc. The politics got in the way each and every time.

So unless we agree with you we're missing the target? Uh.. I don't think so. When it comes to AM stereo, you're shooting with a cap gun; a little noise and no impact.

AM stereo was dead and buried in 1993. Game over..
By "missing the target" I meant, the thread started with the death of iBOC and taking all that aging AM Stereo equipment and trying again. This time going with a system that works. I may be reading into his post somewhat, but I will take that chance.
C-crap was psuedo. Go under a bridge and you lost the stereo. Kahn never did that. It held tight.
badjef said:
Kahn should have been authorized from the get go. Was Leonard difficult to work with? Was his system not quite adequate for the task? I have heard these things and then some.

You heard correctly- and then some. Now add in all the frivolous law suits and you're even closer to the mark.
Do you blame him when there were individuals at Motorola and FCC that were preventing his system from the very marketplace in which the decision was being made in the first place? What were "P" and "D" afraid of anyway?
badjef said:
AM can and is still valuable, I listen to 970 from Tampa every day from my home in Sa-ra-so-ta!

Only for people 50 and older. Don't believe me? Go ask someone in their 20's about when the last time was that they listened to an AM broadcast. My guess is you'll get a blank stare.
You are correct. When was the last time an AM station was targeting 18-24 or similar. Radio Disney probably goes lower but there is no localism. and there is no relate ability to the audience. It is just there for the vacation.
Just because you're a radio hobbyest who happens to remember AM stereo,
I wasn't a "hobbyest" at that time. I was gainfully employed for quite a few years even before that.
doesn't mean there is a bright future for the AM band. Sorry, that's just the truth.
Start targeting those audience with something they can't get anywhere else and watch them come back. They already have the radios for goodness sakes.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
(here's to the Algore warm up)
 
Play Freebird said:
DavidEduardo said:
But its transmitter land became so valuable that they, more recently, sold it when the price was right. The proceed built a new site, farther outside the District, and left a lot of money over after all was done.

As the real estate market improves, we will find more and more AMs that can't make much money cashing in the land value. Or, as some have already done, going from, let's say, 5 kw day 1 kw night, separate patterns to 2.2 kw non directional day, 180 watts non directional nights... acre or two of land (probably closer inside the market) and you can build it anywhere. The directional might need 6 to 10 acres, strategically placed to aim the signal.

One more reason why it makes more sense to open the 76-88 MHz band to AM licensees, rather than continuing to promote AM IBOC as the "solution". Adopt an open source digital standard to keep receiver costs low, design the system to encourage single frequency networks, set a transition period of 20 years and let station owners decide when to shut down the medium wave transmitter and sell off the land.

This should have been planned from the start, but we may still have an opportunity. Opponents of this proposal (NAB, MSTV, etc.) claim there's not enough vacant spectrum to accommodate the few remaining full service TV stations on channels 5 and 6, but where's the conclusive proof that they couldn't move down to 2, 3, or 4 -- or even UHF? LPTVs and TV translators have much more flexibility to relocate (especially in rural markets) so they are less of a concern.

Opponents also tried to derail this plan by telling us it would violate international agreements, but recently I heard Canada is quite interested in pursuing it.

I'm not so sure the FCC would agree to giving up Ch.5 in view of the fact that they're considering allotting Ch.5 for a new VHF station in Seaford, DE. This is in keeping with their rule about each state having at least one commercial VHF station. I get the impression from this new allotment that they see Ch.5 as reserved for television.

But turning Ch. 6 over to the FM band (for AM, LPFM, translators, new stations) makes total sense and could be easily done given that the majority of existing radios can tune the 87 portion of the band.

c5
 
badjef said:
You are correct. When was the last time an AM station was targeting 18-24 or similar. Radio Disney probably goes lower but there is no localism. and there is no relate ability to the audience. It is just there for the vacation.

First, Radio Disney targets 6-11 only. And how do you "localize" a station for pre-adolescents? That's like asking how to localize the Disney Channel.

Start targeting those audience with something they can't get anywhere else and watch them come back.

No, they won't. The band sounds bad... due to the radios of today and the high noise level... but mostly they won't "combe back" because if they are under 55 or so, they never were there to begin with and think of AM as something for geezers... if they think about it at all.
 
Carmine5 said:
I'm not so sure the FCC would agree to giving up Ch.5 in view of the fact that they're considering allotting Ch.5 for a new VHF station in Seaford, DE. This is in keeping with their rule about each state having at least one commercial VHF station. I get the impression from this new allotment that they see Ch.5 as reserved for television.

I would argue this rule is no longer necessary, now that UHF has proven superior to low-band VHF (and arguably high-band, too) for digital TV -- although it will take the FCC years to delete it from the books. In any case, I would expect a substitute VHF channel could be found for Seaford, of all places. How about Ch 4? The closest place I see it used is Harrisburg. Or if that's too tight, Channel 2? Or something in high band?

According to the current DTV table of allotments in 73.622, it appears several states no longer have any full-service commercial stations transmitting in the VHF low- or high-band segments:

Iowa
Maryland
Maine (which has non-comms on 9 and 10)
Minnesota
New Hampshire
North Dakota
Rhode Island
Virginia (has a non-comm on 3 in Roanoke)
Washington (has a non-comm on 8 in Spokane)

DC is also all-UHF.
 
Play Freebird said:
Carmine5 said:
I'm not so sure the FCC would agree to giving up Ch.5 in view of the fact that they're considering allotting Ch.5 for a new VHF station in Seaford, DE. This is in keeping with their rule about each state having at least one commercial VHF station. I get the impression from this new allotment that they see Ch.5 as reserved for television.

I would argue this rule is no longer necessary, now that UHF has proven superior to low-band VHF (and arguably high-band, too) for digital TV -- although it will take the FCC years to delete it from the books. In any case, I would expect a substitute VHF channel could be found for Seaford, of all places. How about Ch 4? The closest place I see it used is Harrisburg. Or if that's too tight, Channel 2? Or something in high band?

According to the current DTV table of allotments in 73.622, it appears several states no longer have any full-service commercial stations transmitting in the VHF low- or high-band segments:

Iowa
Maryland
Maine (which has non-comms on 9 and 10)
Minnesota
New Hampshire
North Dakota
Rhode Island
Virginia (has a non-comm on 3 in Roanoke)
Washington (has a non-comm on 8 in Spokane)

DC is also all-UHF.

That's not exactly true......

New Hampshire has Manchester's WMUR-TV (Channel 9/ RF 9), a commercial ABC network affiliate. Providence, Rhode Island has WPRI-TV (Channel 12/RF 13) and WNAC-TV (Channel 64/RF 12). WPRI is CBS and WNAC is FOX.
 
I'm tired of all the whining about the demise of AM, and that it's largely due to bad radios and excessive noise.

I travel a great deal, and my experience has been that in MOST locations that I drive through or listen in, there is relatively little electrical noise. That's just a myth that people like to perpetuate; why, I don't know. True, there are SOME locations where the noise is terrible, and if you happen to be in one of those then you're going to get poor reception. But in my home and in my car and in most of the hotels I stay in, electrical noise is quite low. I have quite a few high efficiency CFL lamps in my home... and computers. And they don't bother my AM reception!

Almost all of the noise on the AM band is SELF INFLICTED! It is caused by HD hiss covering the band from top to bottom, with very few exceptions. The remaining noise is due to the FCC allowing too many stations to operate with too much power, especially at night. Thus, listeners are stuck with very poor reception quality. But again, this is NOT due to "electrical noise", "power line noise", etc. in MOST cases.

As for bad radios: yes, if you buy poor quality ones, they are. I have a number of excellent ones, and some of them aren't even that expensive.
 
AM is only for people over 50? Did you ever hear of sports talk? Have you ever looked at the 18-49's
for AM sports talk stations?

There are plenty of people in there 20's that listen to sports talk stations, and there is ratings evidence
to back up my point.

There are also quite a few people in their 20's that care about what is going on in the world, and will
turn on a talk station and listen while driving, and use news or talk stations for traffic or weather reports
on a daily basis. They don't care if it's AM or FM!

Just to add this into the mix, I am not naive, I know a lot of people in their 20's don't listen to much radio
these days, but, from what I've seen when they do, a lot of them are only listening to AM. When they are
done listening about their favorite team, or why they are stalled in traffic, or what new law a politician is
signing in to law that they don't like. When they are done, are lot of them turning their radio to FM? Yes
they are to an unused frequency to listen to their I-Pod!

They are not spooky DXers either.......oooooohhhhhh!!!!
 
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