Don Juan said:chrisradioanimal said:Its actually transmitting from the WNNW AM site in Andover/Lowell. It must be directional because the signal is almost non-existent where I am located and I'm located 5-10 minutes from the site.
It's got the range of a college station Chris. It's really just a translator.
I can't get it in places in Methuen, Andover, North Andover.
It has to be shoehorned in pretty tightly so as not to interfere with the protected contours of WFEX and WPHX and (to a much lesser extent) first-adjacent WPRO. Given those limitations, the signal has to be very limited in footprint.
jlehmann said:If you're getting 93.7 HD1, then you should also be getting 2 and 3, unless by HD1 you're just seeing the text display but just getting the analog audio. Some tuners do have trouble with certain HD3 streams, but I haven't seen one that has a problem with the HD2 yet.
Let's not get too excited. One big limitation to HD radio has to do with bandwidth. By the time you parse signals down to HD3, you end up with very compressed audio that can be fatiguing to listen to for any length of time. It's good, I suppose, for those who live within 20 or so miles north of the Peabody tx site but who have difficulty getting WEEI at night (Merrimack Valley?). But many of you may well find that the AM signal actually sounds better.
It's no substitute for simply putting WEEI's programming on the main 93.7 signal.