I can tackle some of this... As to "more BBC" it depends on where you live.
Some cities' public radio stations offer the World Service as a sub channel (HD-2 or HD-3) 24 hours per day, 7 days per week. Many stations aren't that extreme, but offer a "news/talk" programmed sub channel that might be, say, 12 hours / day of the Beeb -- it seems that a general pattern for BBCWS carriage might be (all times local): 12 midnight - 6 am (general BBC WS PRI stream carriage) 9 am - 10 am (Newshour) 3 pm - 4 pm (Newshour) 8 pm - midnight (general BBC WS PRI stream carriage) The PRI website has a search utility where you can look for BBC carriage by state. Those that carry the World Service as HD offerings will be listed as "WXXX-FM2" or "WXXX-FM3". Visit http://www.pri.org. The general buzz I hear is that HD on AM is a losing proposition. Keep in mind that many folks under 30 have never tuned an AM radio station in their life. (and we wonder why they don't listen to SW?) Check out the WOSU website (Columbus, OH) -- they have a letter sent to listeners that describes why they are pretty much abandoning efforts to uniquely serve listeners via their AM station. Visit http://www.wosu.org/ Richard Cuff / Allentown, PA On Wed, Apr 30, 2008 at 12:16 AM, Sergei S. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > John, is that true for any NPR affiliate? How much "more" BBC can one get? > Are there sites where I can find out more about HD radio offerings in my > area? Is HD AM signal really as good as they describe it on that link to > Radiosophy HD radio? > _______________________________________________ Swprograms mailing list [email protected] http://montreal.kotalampi.com/mailman/listinfo/swprograms To unsubscribe: Send an E-mail to [EMAIL PROTECTED], or visit the URL shown above.
