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On Aug 2, 9:54 am, Doug Smith W9WI wrote:
There really aren't that many AM transmitters left -- offhand I can think of St. John's (NL), Windsor, Winnipeg, Regina (Watrous), Edmonton, Calgary, and Vancouver. The four on the Prairies all have FM relays within the city centre, so I'd imagine the majority of the audience is listening on FM even there. Apparently you *can* specify an AM frequency in the AF field - I've seen it done - though while you can direct a receiver *from* FM *to* AM you obviously can't do it the other way around. There are still Radio 1 repeaters on AM in small towns. All the new stuff is on FM. There was a major stink a few years ago when CBC Toronto traded in their old AM frequency for the last available FM frequency in the Toronto/Hamilton/Buffalo area. We played with DAB for a while on L band, but have quietly walked away from it. There's just one multiplex still on the air here in Vancouver. Yeah, that's unfortunate. Your system provides more choice, better quality, and no interference to the existing analog service. I suppose the lack of economies of scale with the U.S. market doomed it. The CRTC is now considering allowing our IBOC system. (and the CBC has tested it in Toronto and Peterborough) They seem VERY leery of authorizing it on AM though. The main push for digital radio here is now Sirius. We were using totally standard Eureka 147, albeit at a different frequency than Europe. It works, but suffers from spotty coverage due to lousy transmitters - if they had continued to build it out, it might work better. But the one piddly little transmitter left on Mount Seymour gives surprisingly good coverage. I bought a little DAB radio at Radio Shack, and it works just fine. One issue that has been raised as a stumbling block to DAB in the Americas is that multiplexes require stations to share a frequency - stations that are otherwise competitors. The only remaining multiplex here has the three CBC English networks and the two CBC French networks. The other multi- plexes, before they were turned down, had stations owned by the same companies on them (Corus, CHUM). We (hams) have oodles of bandwidth in our microwave bands. We could play with this stuff too. Laura Halliday VE7LDH "Non sequitur. Your ACKS are Grid: CN89mg uncoordinated." ICBM: 49 16.05 N 122 56.92 W - Nomad the Network Engineer |
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