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1) No experience with other peoples' car radios. I understand that MY car
radio may have problems dealing with the strength of this particular signal. 2) The distortion occurs ALL the time, and NONE of my travels are in the vicinity of high-rise buildings. However, I'm always within 3-5 miles of the transmitter, which is on the highest point in this city. 3) I understand all the other possible causes you mention, including the times when you stop your car and seem to be in a "node" of lousy reception which is gone when the car moves. The only other non-scientific clue I have comes from an acquaintance who's been involved with the radio biz in this city for about 20 years. His highly rigorous analysis: "They compress the CRAP out of their signal so they can tell advertisers they'll be heard 90 miles away". "Paul_Morphy" wrote in message ... "Doug Kanter" wrote in message ... Assuming for the moment that the radio isn't at fault, why on earth would a radio station run their equipment this way? You've designed an imperfect experiment. It is unlikely that the most-powerful station would sell advertising if their signal sounded as bad as you describe. If the discussion is about the quality of the signal, other causes, such as equipment, location (which could result in multipath interference, such as is observed in urban areas with tall, steel-frame buildings, or mixing-product intereference caused by proximity to other strong radio emitters), and user perception must be eliminated. Eg, do other people using other receivers in other locations in the Rochester area report similar characteristics of this station's signal? If so, then your conclusion is valid. I think you're going to find, though, that your receiver is at fault. It may not be tuning to the station's frequency; off-frequency tuning of fm signals results in distortion. As it is a car radio, I assume you are in motion while listening, which would tend to make multipath, front-end overload, or mixing product interference problems intermittent and variable. Laypersons frequently overlook the necessity for scientific rigor when constructing hypotheses, leading to all sorts of wild ideas and stupid laws. It may in fact be the case that your local rocker is broadcasting a distorted signal, but you have not presented sufficient evidence to make that assertion. Therefore, further discussion of "why" is pointless. "PM" |
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