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"David Eduardo" wrote: wrote in message oups.com... On Mar 5, 7:23?pm, "Guerite?" wrote: wrote HD's channels are low-bitrate streams The station has a certain digital HD bandwidth that they can utilize as they wish. They can allocate the full HD bandwidth to a single channel for the best sound. On FM that would result in a CD quality sound. Or they can divy up the bandwidth into 2 or 3 channels for lesser quality sound in each channel. of the same repetitive programming If a station chooses to transmit two (2) HD channels, and many do, the second HD channel's programming (HD2) is unique while the first HD channel is the superioir sounding digital version of the analog signal broadcast. causing adjacent-channel interference Digital is digital - there is no static, noise, interference or fading whatsoever on HD radio. and with only 60% the coverage of analog. Using 1/100th the power of the equivelent analog's signal carrier. Thus a power savings to the station. HD/IBOC requires much more power than alaog broadcasting - you lose ! Nope, it is a fraction of the power. A 50 kw AM uses a 500 watt HD signal on the same frequency This is pure baloney. Same crapola the DRM crowd tried to pass off on the general public. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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