In article ,
Radio Ronn lq6dpvk02-at-sneakemail.com wrote:
Well, a couple of nights ago, I did a band scan to see how badly
IBOC was ****ing* on the AM band. I only heard four signals, two of
which were local (Seattle).
DX-ing is something which adds no value to the broadcasts or broadcasters
and has never been a reliable source of listening outside of it's protected
contours.
If someone wants to try to retain the ability to DX....and will do so at the
expense of fidelity....then it's a losing battle.
99% of all listeneing is done within the stations protected contours and
those listeners will recieve the benefit of added fidelity and fuctionality.
They argument that it affects DX is not a valid point.
I'm not talking about DX.
Here's the suicide pact: A station goes for IBOC, and all the stations
adjacent to it get the outer fringes of their service area cropped off
because of the new interference. They can retaliate by turning on their
IBOC causing a reduction in service area for the first station.
Since the HD receivers are a flop, there's no gain in listeners, only
a possible reduction.
The big noise-talker in Sacramento (1540?) was ****ing on things up
here pretty good. And they've since quit.
Mark Zenier
Googleproofaddress(account:mzenier provider:eskimo domain:com)