Carmine5 said:
since the NAB Show, there have been renewed calls to confiscate VHF ch. 5 & 6 for FM and to abandon the AM band altogether. If things go as predicted, Genachowski leaves ([best Irish brogue] "Saints be praised"), Tom Wheeler gets vetted for the post of chairman while Mignon Clyburn serves as interim chairman, this idea might have a shot. Clyburn has voiced strong approval for giving ch. 5 & 6 to radio ever since the idea was first proposed. She's convinced it will bring greater diversity in terms of broadcast property ownership.
So, HD-AM may end up becoming an even deader issue then it is already. Of course, Ajit Pai is intent on preserving and improving the AM service. Perhaps we'll see a synthesis of both ideas--weaker AM stations migrate to expanded FM thereby thinning the AM band for clear channels and powerhouse AM stations, allowing them to have more bandwidth.
While this might actually be a nice idea, it's just that...an idea. However, when you deal in what's practical, this idea falls flat on its face.
With AM listenership at an all-time low, continuing to decline, and its demographics essentially 55-to-death, how many AM listeners will make any attempt at all to find a radio that can tune 76-88 MHz? Yes, there are some older TV-audio radios out there, but those haven't been sold in the US since the digital-TV conversion...no market for them. You're talking about (by one estimate) over one billion radios that would become obsolete if the band were migrated, and many of the systems now being installed in cars cannot have their radio sections upgraded. Further, there's a question of how many years it would take for a significant number of listeners to make the change so that the AM-band signals could be shut down, because no owner with an ounce of common sense will cut off the signal that makes the money. Years? Decades? Ever? By the time that happens, if it does, will it matter? Will AM be a completely dead issue long before then?
I don't want to come off like a complete pessimist, but there are too many unknowns here for a viable business model. If AM station owners end up feeling they have no choice, it might be worth pursuing, but they would have to accept the very real possibility of the death of AM being hastened by migration to another band.