On Jan 13, 6:25*am, SMS wrote:
On 1/12/2012 10:49 PM, Dave Barnett wrote:
On 1/12/2012 5:26 PM, SMS wrote:
I think you're well aware of the answer. Not every FM station will be
able to use 400 Khz. Some can have only one sideband at maximum power. A
small percentage can't use either sideband. Life is rough when you're
trying to maximize spectral efficiency.
In fact a very small percentage will be able to use 400 KHz at their
assigned frequencies. We had this discussion once before, since the
Ibiquity spec posted he
That's why the industry is pushing for asymmetric sidebands. 200 KHz is
a compromise when 400 KHz isn't feasible.
- It's absolutely vital to the future of terrestrial radio
- to move to digital broadcasting. It's the only way to
- remain a relevant choice. We're not talking about
- radio enthusiasts, we're talking about the mass
- market which matters to broadcasters.
Spoken/Written like a true disciple of D'Eduardo !
http://www.davidgleason.com/
Terrestrial Radio serving up Audio Content to The Masses
-radio-where-content-is-king-and-audio-quality-
-just-needs-to-be-good-enough-to-be-enjoyable-
-to-the-radio-listener-
As always this is RHF and...
I'll leave the Radio 'On' ~ RHF
www.youtube.com/watch?v=g1jpxlEPHX8
-ps-:-turn-your-radio-'on'-&-just-listen-

)-