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#1
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![]() Thinking about updating a high end home audio system. Should I wait for IBOC to be brought out for consumers or will I be waiting a real long time for this to happen ?? I like quality gear but don't want to waste big bucks on traditional receiver if it will be obsolete in 6 months to a one year. Steve |
#2
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Steve Stone wrote:
Thinking about updating a high end home audio system. Should I wait for IBOC to be brought out for consumers or will I be waiting a real long time for this to happen ?? What do you mean? IBOC receivers are on the shelf right now. Kenwood is probably the big vendor currently. Expect prices to drop, though. Not that this is high end stuff by any stretch, but it's out there. I like quality gear but don't want to waste big bucks on traditional receiver if it will be obsolete in 6 months to a one year. If you have a high end system, why do you even bother with a tuner anyway? I will say that high end tuners like the McKay-Dymek are probably not ever going to get digital back ends... and if anything, they are probably going to have to be equipped with tighter and tighter IF filters to deal with the noise issues. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
#3
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On 3 Mar 2004 16:06:09 GMT, Steve Stone
wrote: Thinking about updating a high end home audio system. Should I wait for IBOC to be brought out for consumers or will I be waiting a real long time for this to happen ?? I've heard IBOC. The last thing you want to connect it to is a high end audio system. It's sort of like buying a Rolls Royce and using it to haul manure. Rich |
#4
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In article , Rich Wood wrote:
I've heard IBOC. The last thing you want to connect it to is a high Owch....and that coming from a former WOR staffer.... ![]() -- Sven Weil New York City, U.S.A. |
#5
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![]() "Rich Wood" wrote in message ... On 3 Mar 2004 16:06:09 GMT, Steve Stone wrote: Thinking about updating a high end home audio system. Should I wait for IBOC to be brought out for consumers or will I be waiting a real long time for this to happen ?? I've heard IBOC. The last thing you want to connect it to is a high end audio system. It's sort of like buying a Rolls Royce and using it to haul manure. I heard IBOC on the almost de facto Kenwood car radio today in Chicago on all-music WIND. It sounded marvelous, with no noticeable artifacts and very nice resolution, clarity and feel on music. It is not FM, which I would expect as the FM preemphasis curve really colors the high-frequency content; in some senses the IBOC AM is nicer than processed FM. |
#6
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On 5 Mar 2004 15:44:46 GMT, "David Eduardo"
wrote: I've heard IBOC. The last thing you want to connect it to is a high end audio system. It's sort of like buying a Rolls Royce and using it to haul manure. I heard IBOC on the almost de facto Kenwood car radio today in Chicago on all-music WIND. It sounded marvelous, with no noticeable artifacts and very nice resolution, clarity and feel on music. It is not FM, which I would expect as the FM preemphasis curve really colors the high-frequency content; in some senses the IBOC AM is nicer than processed FM. IBOC may sound fine on a car radio in a high ambient noise environment, but the question was about high end audio. When you have audiophiles refusing to play CDs because they don't sound as good as vinyl you're not going to find them pleased with IBOC on either AM or FM. I know audiophiles who have no audio source other than a turntable on systems costing $20,000 or more. The Emperor is a nudist. Rich |
#7
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On 5 Mar 2004 18:05:03 GMT, Rich Wood wrote:
I know audiophiles who have no audio source other than a turntable on systems costing $20,000 or more. The Emperor is a nudist. Rich Want to send them to a Psych ward? Have an audiologist do a spectrum analysis on their hearing.....(c; Too funny...... Larry W4CSC POWER is our friend! |
#8
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#9
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![]() "Rich Wood" wrote in message ... On 5 Mar 2004 15:44:46 GMT, "David Eduardo" wrote: I've heard IBOC. The last thing you want to connect it to is a high end audio system. It's sort of like buying a Rolls Royce and using it to haul manure. I heard IBOC on the almost de facto Kenwood car radio today in Chicago on all-music WIND. It sounded marvelous, with no noticeable artifacts and very nice resolution, clarity and feel on music. It is not FM, which I would expect as the FM preemphasis curve really colors the high-frequency content; in some senses the IBOC AM is nicer than processed FM. IBOC may sound fine on a car radio in a high ambient noise environment, but the question was about high end audio. Actually, it was a car radio in an office. Since there are no availble tuners, one makes do.. When you have audiophiles refusing to play CDs because they don't sound as good as vinyl you're not going to find them pleased with IBOC on either AM or FM. That I agree with. I refused to use CDs for my Música en Flor service in the 80's, even when many things were reissued in Japan on that medium; the cuts did not sound right mixed with mostly-vinyl origin material. So I could definitely understand a purist. I don't find most conusmers to fall in that definition. Most will see the "digital" label and _know_ it must be better. |
#10
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On 7 Mar 2004 16:47:18 GMT, "David Eduardo"
wrote: That I agree with. I refused to use CDs for my Música en Flor service in the 80's, even when many things were reissued in Japan on that medium; the cuts did not sound right mixed with mostly-vinyl origin material. So I could definitely understand a purist. Early CDs were terrible. The masters were equalized with vinyl in mind and would shatter coffee mugs. Most will see the "digital" label and _know_ it must be better. That's why much of this discussion is really irrelevant. IBOC doesn't have to be good. The majority of the market will be satisfied with quality not much higher than MP3 at 64 kbps. I was asked about the quality difference between XM's talk channels vs. the music channels. I tuned in to the new traffic and weather channels. The quality was awful, both technically and programatically. It sounded (on every traffic channel) like the studio was a tiled bathroom with awesomely bad artifacts. The announcers were among the worst I've ever heard. This is clearly being done on the cheap with kids who can barely read. Hide the expensive glassware until their voices change. I was extremely disappointed with what I heard. I think I'll keep my AM/FM radio for when I travel between Boston, New York and Washington. WINS, WCBS, WBZ and WTOP have nothing to fear. It's strange that they're starting in major markets with small market talent. Rich |