ai4i said:I park where a particular FM station has some low signal hiss but it pops right into HD and holds HD, of course the hiss vanishes.
Elsewhere, that same station is absolutely full quieting with the volume cranked up but not the slightest trace of HD.
Seems counter-intuitive (sp?).
JohnnyElectron said:Yep, you can have two separate antennae/transmitters, but I believe that they have to be at the same "site" - not even the same tower, but just the same site. Seems to me to be more energy efficient to have one analog system and then one HD-only transmitter/antenna than waste power into a dummy load, and it would be really easy for those stations to implement the power increase with immediate results. Anybody know of these sites?
audioguy said:They might be using separate antennas for analog and HD. That could result in signal dropouts in different locations.
Savage said:If you don't co-locate the digital and analog antennas as closely as possible, the potential for self-interference increases dramatically. Since it's impossible for separate antennas to occupy the same space at the same time (or so I was taught in high school) there's always the self-interference problem in IBAC. It's just a matter of degree.
The only comprehensive solution is the interleaved purpose-specific IBAC digital-analog radiator. Big buck$$...but at least, there's one serious HD Radio problem solved. ONE down....946 to go....![]()
Nick said:During DX I sometimes can get a completely different station on HD than analog on the same frequency. Even if both the local and the DX station are running IBOC.
I'm not saying I recemmend them, or any other product that goes to the purpose of getting the sham crap moving electrons through the ether, I'm just saying the hardware is out there if you want to play.OKCRadioGuy said:I know of an ERI dual-feed job that one broadcaster on the system shut off their ibuz because it worked so well... Not. The other broadcaster is still running theirs. I can take the whip on my spectrum analyzer and move it around, getting all different analog to digital ratios. On a car radio it's pretty easy to hear some self jamming within the first several miles away from their stick. This thing is the equivalent of a 12 bay and pretty much parked right in town. Nope... Not such a great idea in my opinion indeedeee...