I think the relaxation of the criteria for switchover at 50 % of users on digital rather than DAB is perfectly rational. I haven't got a DAB receiver, never will unless future cars have them. I haven't got an FM receiver because after 30 years of chasing ever better receivers, aerials as big as a bed all for the sake of music with birdy accompaniment, I gave up. I've listened via Freeview for the last ten years. Yes, I know all about the grating string tones of mp2, but rather that than compressed, plum-pudding-sound, hissy FM. And now there's the HD stream.
All that's needed to make ordinary DAB sound more than reasonable for music broadcasts is the bit rate changing from 192 kbps to 256 kbps. Park the cynicism and campaign for that instead. That's a battle you might win.
As for DAB coverage, I believe those that tell me they're making strenuous efforts to improve coverage. They're making a much better fist of the coverage assessment now than they did for FM. FM was assessed with outside roof aerials at a decent height above ground level; DAB (I believe) is for internal receivers on a coat hanger. Why the blind faith? Well look at the improvement in DAB coverage over the years.
On longwave (is there a threat) I do hope we have the sense to keep 198 kHz as a national broadcast frequency; as an emergency broadcast this could be invaluable. It gets everywhere, even underground!
All that's needed to make ordinary DAB sound more than reasonable for music broadcasts is the bit rate changing from 192 kbps to 256 kbps. Park the cynicism and campaign for that instead. That's a battle you might win.
As for DAB coverage, I believe those that tell me they're making strenuous efforts to improve coverage. They're making a much better fist of the coverage assessment now than they did for FM. FM was assessed with outside roof aerials at a decent height above ground level; DAB (I believe) is for internal receivers on a coat hanger. Why the blind faith? Well look at the improvement in DAB coverage over the years.
On longwave (is there a threat) I do hope we have the sense to keep 198 kHz as a national broadcast frequency; as an emergency broadcast this could be invaluable. It gets everywhere, even underground!
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