Kmagrill said:
The only thing going for HD is multicasting.
Incidently, someone earlier lamented that it's too bad a radio engineer wasn't involved in the concept of HD. In fact, quite a few were. Lucent (Bell Labs) was one of the originators of what is now the Ibiquity system. The fact that there may be some technological ideas today that might have been less evident in 1993, doesn't mean that some smart guys weren't working on the system.
That is also its biggest issue. If you are only listening to a station's HD-2 or higher channel, when multipath or other reception issues cause it to drop, you get dead silence. that is much more annoying than having the sound go back and forth from muddy to good.
They may have had some smart engineers working on the system, but even smart engineers can make mistakes. Like locating the sideband outside the channel, just so they could preserver RDS, SCA, and a few other services. All of these functions are duplicated by HD, and HD can do them better. If they had placed the HD subchannels inside the bandwith of the station, not only would there be no complaints about adjacent channel interference, but the gain / bandwidth product would help HD range much more than any plan to boost sideband power.
So - yeah - the engineers screwed up by:
(1) not realizing the fundamentals of the gain / bandwidth product
(2) underestimating the number of first adjacent reception scenarios across the country
(3) outright lying about the nature of AM receivers presently sold (ALL new AM radios are inherently broadband)
(4) not realizing an HD-2 dropout would be so annoying
(5) attempting to cover up defects in the system by silencing and insulting all critics
(6) not testing enough to uncover the defects in the system
(7) not building in fall back plans like C-Quam for AM and narrowing the channel for HD FM in case there were insurmountable problems
And I can think of lots more. Respect for engineers does not come solely from years on the job, job title, degree received, or who they are. It comes from the number of successful designs completed. And HD is a huge black mark on the resumes of all involved in its engineering. Lets call it exactly what it is - an engineering disaster.