What happened to FM tuners?

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  • čas přidán 6. 10. 2019
  • Most high-end audio products do not have FM tuners. Why is that? Is FM radio a dying art form or is there another reason this questioner hasn't yet thought of? Have a question you want to ask Paul? www.psaudio.com/ask-paul/
    I have finished my memoir! You can go read it now: www.amazon.com/gp/product/173... It's called 99% True and it is chock full of adventures, debauchery, struggles, heartwarming stories, triumphs and failures, great belly laughs, and a peek inside the high-end audio industry you've never known before.
    I plan a few surprises for early adopters, so go to www.paulmcgowan.com and add your name to the list of interested readers. There's an entire gallery of never before seen photos too.
  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 198

  • @InsideOfMyOwnMind
    @InsideOfMyOwnMind Před 4 lety +25

    FM radio has become the greatest of wasted technologies. It has the ability to sound as good as anything you've ever heard but nobody uses it in that way anymore.

    • @stinkycheese804
      @stinkycheese804 Před 4 lety +1

      My FM radio sounds great. Maybe you need a better tuner or antenna? Did you know that US FM radio now has many digitally transmitted stations? Hmmmmmm.

    • @InsideOfMyOwnMind
      @InsideOfMyOwnMind Před 4 lety +2

      @@stinkycheese804 We have a lot of hybrid digital FM channels here but they all just use the same over processed BS on it. Besides, have you looked at the bitrate for HD FM? Typically around 64k. Same as a low quality internet steam.

  • @geirendre
    @geirendre Před 4 lety +16

    The worst part of the "one syndicate owns all stations" is (at least where I live) that all stations repeats the same commercials over and over again all day.
    Day after day after day after... like every 15 minutes.
    And they're wonder why there are fever and fever listeners tuning in.

  • @LookSee
    @LookSee Před 4 lety +10

    College FM radio stations are great, every genre, student DJs as well as professionals. And commercial free!

    • @zulumax1
      @zulumax1 Před 3 lety

      There were several great ones run by community colleges around here in western Washington state, but they got bought out and removed from the air. I miss the random human DJ picking out the music, not one of these computerized stations which has the same random playlist which plays the same few songs over and over. KPLU which was run by Pacific Lutheran University has changed their call sign to KNKX, but is referred to as Jazz24. Public radio station, every weekend from 6 to midnight is all blues. I loved the blues timeline where they would play a set the the same song done by different artists from the oldest recording, as far back as the 1920's, to the most modern version.

  • @kkeller3461
    @kkeller3461 Před 3 lety +2

    I am a broadcast engineer, so I know about FM audio quality. There are a few exceptions, but the audio on most stations these days is like running your CDs and albums through a buzz saw. Multiband compression, followed by multiband limiting, followed by multiband clipping, followed by composite clipping, and a dynamic range of, in some cases, less than 3 dB. No wonder people have found better alternatives. It doesn't have to be that way, though. A few (very few) stations actually try to transmit in something close to high fidelity. They can sound quite pleasant.

  • @nickclark6001
    @nickclark6001 Před 4 lety +10

    Thank goodness for the BBC still going strong on FM in the UK! DAB came in about 10 years ago and it was great at first then the bandwidths started getting squeezed as more and more stations got added. Now some of the DAB stations are just 80 kB/s with just 2 or 3 at 192 kB/ s Nationaly.FM was supposed to be turned off 3 years ago, but they can't do that until over half the population have DAB and that doesn't seem to be the case any time soon. FM is still the best sounding radio medium when played through a decent tuner 😀 most of the cars have had DAB for the last two or three years now.

    • @alistairwilson5344
      @alistairwilson5344 Před 4 lety

      Totally agree with you there. I use my old Naim NAT 01 more than any other source,mostly on Radio 3-it just sounds so right.

  • @bc527c
    @bc527c Před 4 lety +12

    What happened to FM radio... Clear Channel happened...

    • @RadioAirchecks
      @RadioAirchecks Před 3 lety

      Actually, the Telecommunications Act of 1996 happened. It changed the ownership rules which in turn made "Clear Channel (and others) happen".

  • @curtchase3730
    @curtchase3730 Před 4 lety +20

    Having a good old school receiver or tuner from the late 70's, early 80's, with a wide bandwidth selector, strong signal, etc, will blow away any streaming service easily (as far as technical audio quality is concerned). It's the programming that killed FM.

    • @doowopper1951
      @doowopper1951 Před 4 lety

      Only with tuners like the Day Sequerra and the Magnum Dynalab, They had S/N near 75dB, freq resp from 20 to 15-17k, and distortion around .1% THD. No match for the best streaming services like Qobuz, but would best Spotify, Deezer, etc. But stations broadcasting quality signals anywhere near that were almost nonexistent. 99% of the stations were more like 50-12k, 50-55dB S/N, and several tenths of a percent THD.

    • @terrywho22
      @terrywho22 Před 4 lety +2

      @@doowopper1951 I understand what you are saying and the Dynalabs and McIntoshes were stellar, but there were more than just esoteric/premium brands that had great specs. The Kenwoods and Sansuis of their day were top notch. Pioneer and Onkyo made some great tuners as well, among others...

    • @chadbarker2316
      @chadbarker2316 Před 4 lety

      You got that right!

    • @thisisnev
      @thisisnev Před 4 lety +2

      Yep, and the beauty of it is that those vintage tuners (and sometimes receivers) are sold at pocket-money prices on eBay nowadays. I picked up a Luxman T-111 for £40 not too long ago, and a Technics ST-S3L was thrown in for free with an audio timer for £25!

    • @doowopper1951
      @doowopper1951 Před 4 lety

      terrywho22 Back then, I was selling the Sansuis, Pioneers, Nikkos, Rotels, Accuphases, etc. only the Accuphase gave very good performance. I had the top end Pioneer receiver (SX9100??), as Pioneer gave salespeople at their retailers 50% off. Although it was better than most available, it was no match for the best streaming available today. And, the specs weren’t really that great (except adjacent channel selectivity, which was superb, besting the alternate channel selectivity of most units available)

  • @ssgeek4515
    @ssgeek4515 Před 4 lety +2

    Here in the UK certain national stations use heavy Dynamic Compression and it may sound loud and beefy but its really bad for almost all music.FM tuned right on a BBC station is great but the network called H...T it really distroys FM. To all school kids...A Louder station is NOT Quality.

  • @Frank_42
    @Frank_42 Před 4 lety +8

    What ever happened to telegraph machines? I keep calling my cellular provider and they have no idea what I'm talking about.

  • @adotopp1865
    @adotopp1865 Před 4 lety +4

    FM radio in UK is very good -especially Radio 3 . They broadcast live performances almost every day. The program "In Tune" has guest musicians playing live. If you want excellent FM Radio move to the United Kingdom ( be sure to research the best reception areas) get a good FM radio tuner and an aerial and you will be happy!

  • @pdcragin33
    @pdcragin33 Před 4 lety +2

    Would have happily adapted Internet Radio if the bit quality on most stations weren’t so miserable. Discovered that my Orlando has several fine HD Radio stations and bought a Sangean tabletop. Terrible headphone output BUT excellent line out. So I bought the Tuner with optical output. Heavenly! Very close to CD quality and the piggy-back “HD2” stations are often what I prefer to hear in Classical and one variant in jazz. But I’ll check out Paul’s favorite on the Internet.

    • @jimkellogg1344
      @jimkellogg1344 Před 4 lety +1

      Paul Cragin, Paul’s favorite, KPLU, is now KNKX (NPR & “Jazz 24”), from Seattle. Jazz 24 is available on its own app for mobile devices.

  • @erickbollmann1757
    @erickbollmann1757 Před 4 lety +8

    I love fm tuners with analog dial... just love them

  • @soring5880
    @soring5880 Před 4 lety +2

    I used to listen a lot to fm radio, there were local news, good, varied music and interesting chatter. Nowadays it’s all commercial radio that plays the same 10 songs over and over and over on all stations, ads every 15 minutes and dull presenters that have absolutely nothing to say. Same as TV channels I would say. I sometimes stream over the internet my hometowns only independent radio station left and it sounds very good. But it sounds even better on a good tuner.

  • @terrywho22
    @terrywho22 Před 4 lety +4

    Thanks for addressing this question. I love my FM tuners, from my mono tube Sherwoods to solid-state Rotels. I listen to mostly college stations, public radio, and even (gasp!!) AM... especially at night when I can pull stations from 500+ miles away. Honestly, the tuner(s) get as much work in my system as the turntable and cd player combined. Granted, over the air broadcast feels more and more like a dying media & I know that I can pull stations from anywhere in the world via stream, but there is just something special about hearing a station that is anywhere from 100 (FM) to 1000 (AM) miles away via radio that just misses the mark when you stream it. The quality of the stream for one... or it could be that I'm just getting old.

  • @georgealanlpsandcds9311
    @georgealanlpsandcds9311 Před 4 lety +4

    Personally, I have found that many colleges and universities have very fine FM stations which I enjoy listening to. That’s why when recently shopping for a replacement amplifier I chose to go with a Yamaha receiver that I am very happy with. Just my humble opinion.

  • @vincentcalvacca9260
    @vincentcalvacca9260 Před 4 lety +4

    Hi Paul.....Vince from Lodi NJ here. Watch and listen everyday. Bought your book on Amazon Audibles too! Today, you mentioned being an NPR listener. Well, I am as well. LOVE "Wait.....Wait......Don't Tell Me" each Saturday. I look forward to it. Interesting and informative programs for sure. Keep up the great work. Wish I lived closer to Boulder 'cause I'd be there in a flash. Be well.

  • @squirrelarch
    @squirrelarch Před 4 lety +8

    My Dad had a Quad FM4 tuner & a whopping FM aerial profesionally fitted back in the 80's which was great for UK BBC stations that I listened to (Radio 1 & BBC radio London) & made some great recordings but even on the best stations (BBC radios 3 & 4) there could still be noise at times in the quiet parts. And we had way better than most. There are good Internet stations that sound better than FM. Just a shame our DAB radio in the UK is so lo-fi.

  • @daturat100r
    @daturat100r Před 4 lety +2

    BFM and George here in nz i regularly listen to on the FM airwaves as data is a little to expensive but both are online ,BFM being the first online station in the world pioneered way back when

  • @JohnJackson66
    @JohnJackson66 Před 4 lety +2

    I was setting up Naim's tuners in the late 80s, it really was a great time for FM

  • @wilcalint
    @wilcalint Před 4 lety +2

    I’ll use the call sign WGN-FM Chicago although it was back in the 60’s and I can’t remember if that was the exact station. “WGN” broadcasted the Chicago Symphony live lets say Saturday evenings a dozen times a year or so. In addition to that they would broadcast various live, and recorded, content one of which was Folk music like Midnight Special.
    At that time FM music was the most accurate source you could have for your HiFi System. I had a famous H.H. Scott receiver and would always be listening to the Saturday night program.

  • @motorradmike
    @motorradmike Před 4 lety +6

    For background music I mostly listen to a Sangean HDRadio with an attic dipole antenna played through a modest Modi3 DAC. The Sangean’s internal DAC is horrid. The SQ on many stations broadcasting in my area are generally pretty decent. Notably, NPR has quite good and relatively uncompressed jazz and classical programming. I leave NPR’s left leaning newscasts to guys like Paul. Cheers!

    • @MrBeansOmatic
      @MrBeansOmatic Před 4 lety

      I considered getting a Sangean HD Radio... but there is NO MUSIC worth sending thru the rest of my system on local FM radio stations... I do better checking out my Spotify suggestions, or just choosing a playlist and let it play for hours, for background or otherwise. Even with the last reciever I used, with an amplified antenna, there was nothin in range to listen to, was a waste of money.

    • @motorradmike
      @motorradmike Před 4 lety +1

      Beans O"Matic, I’ve never had luck with amplified antennas. Mostly the just seem to amplify the noise inherent with over the air broadcast signals. With a simple $30 S shaped dipole in the attic with strongest pattern directed to the middle of FM towers, I pick up about 16 stations with decent signal strength. Even the worst analog station I receive sounds better than SirusXM, Direct TV music channels or other overly compressed crappy mp3 music files. Your results may vary!

    • @MrBeansOmatic
      @MrBeansOmatic Před 4 lety +1

      @@motorradmike Luckily I didn't spend too much money on the amplified antenna, so tossing it was no problem, and I did try it with some different receivers. But there just are not enough stations or programming worth sending the money on. If money wasnt the issue, I would get a Yamaha tuner to go with a fairly recently acquired SA-701 integrated amp. It would look cool, and I could listen to the 3 pm classical hour on my local NPR Station. For now though, I get an amazing variety of music, including pieces I've never heard before, from Spotify. The next piece of gear I'm eyeing is a Schiit (mmph?) Loki 3 DAC to put between my smartphone or iMac so I can enjoy more music with more detail. Thanks, enjoy the music.

  • @Golddragon214
    @Golddragon214 Před 4 lety +6

    Paul, the program you've described sounds like Copper Magazine Live. That would be great to hear.

  • @aakar88
    @aakar88 Před 4 lety +4

    I like to use AM to listen tp Baseball and news, while working or when sound quality is non essential, . however the AM tuner is gone from about 75% of clock radios and boomboxes!

  • @bulldogbrower6732
    @bulldogbrower6732 Před 4 lety +2

    Thanks Paul for doing a segment on FM radio. I am lucky enough to live close enough to the Philadelphia market ( 60 miles ) to receive some of the best FM around. Sorry that others don't have good stations with good programming. I am addicted to eBay and buy tuners from the 1970s for a steal. Coupled with a good antenna on the roof I have a quality set up. WOGL in Philly has a Saturday night dance party hosted by a live DJ ( Bob Pantano ) with a live audience. We also have the Geator with the Heater, Jerry Blavat with a live audience playing oldies on Kool 98.3 from Margate on the Jersey Shore. On weekdays we listen to Temple University's Jazz/ Classical station, one of the best in the country. Finally there is the station from the University of Pennsylvania, WXPN, for some real variety. You know Philly is known for its music. I don't think FM will ever die here. Pick up a Kenwood, Marantz, Technics, Denon, or Sansui tuner from the 70s, you don't know what you are missing. All of those stations are on the internet. No comparison to a good FM tuner. There is a guide to vintage FM tuners called FM Tuner Info Page, google it.

    • @paureising
      @paureising Před 4 lety

      Love Temple University's WRTI from Philly. Classical and Jazz curated by live local music lovers.

  • @gotham61
    @gotham61 Před 4 lety +2

    When stations added the digital carrier for HD Radio, the analog signal suffered, making good clean analog FM reception harder than ever.

  • @dogpoundoatthetube7756

    I still have a few fm/am anolog tuners and now using a Kenwood. It is a beautiful tuner and we still have a hand full of excellent stations in the Maryland/ DC area...

  • @billd9667
    @billd9667 Před 4 lety +2

    We have many good FM stations (low end of the dial public and college) in the NY metro area. The sound quality beats the standard MP3 streams I get over the Internet. Some streams use AAC, like Paul’s Jazz24 and WFMT Chicago and that is an improvement. Streaming noise levels are lower though, so choose your poison.
    As far as getting a tuner goes, you could get a little Yamaha R-N303 receiver and use the line out jacks on it. It’s kinda big for a tuner and you’d be making some class A-B amp heat as waste, but the Yamaha receivers have pretty good tuners if you have the room.

  • @mgene63
    @mgene63 Před 4 lety +2

    The big issue is you can't steam NFL games over iHeart radio only actual FM

  • @jijeshbc
    @jijeshbc Před 4 lety +2

    First of all ,Hello Paul, I accidentally watched one of Your videos and now regular by 2 months and recently subscribed after watching a lot of videos, Great work and knowledge,
    About FM Radio, 20-25 years back when my country or in my district started FM and till that time we only get AM stations, but when FM started and when we started enjoying stereo sound we were like in heaven, some times the signals won't get clear, then it automatically changes into mono mode and an LED lights up when stereo signals are back...that enjoyment still in mind,..nostalgic.but anyway we love FM, ..Thanks Paul.

    • @jijeshbc
      @jijeshbc Před 4 lety

      I'm from India ,Kerala

  • @inabit1956
    @inabit1956 Před 4 lety

    I'm using a McIntosh MR67 tuner and fortunately have a good local all music public radio station. The sound quality is great. As long as they stay in business, it's good enough for me.
    Looking forward to PS Audio Radio!

  • @StrikitRich
    @StrikitRich Před 4 lety

    Does the regular compressed FM audio broadcast sound any better than average 64-kbps stream for music? Talk and news is usually fine.

  • @dublb232
    @dublb232 Před 4 lety +2

    I love your idea for 'real radio' on the internet and I would be the first to sign up! ...But still there is something about "live" ...community interaction etc. that can't be abbreviated. I studied broadcasting in school, thinking that was a route I might take (also a musician). Didn't happen, I pursued other things. But it kind of 'kills me' that our mainstream music sources have become such joke! It really is harming to our culture I believe. The commonality we shared when we heard something amazing for the first time seems to be lost. And I'm thinking anything from Glen Miller, to Presley, Johnny Cash, Merle Haggard, Roy Orbison, Beatles/Stones, The Clash, Steely Dan (Oh yeah!) and way beyond. ...I fear those less divisive times are gone. I would love to do a radio show that celebrated those incredible times when we were brought together/not divided by media. "FM, no static all" Thanks Donald Fagin! ...Sorry if I got off on a tangent, but I think you would understand. 😉 Great sound used to be something everyone (almost) cared about; now it's just an afterthought if at all. A phone is not a substitute for a real camera... nor a "Hifi"system!

  • @OnaRose7
    @OnaRose7 Před 4 lety

    If you miss classic radio stations but want great sound try the Radio Paradise application on apple IOS. Eclectic, commercial free, you can choose the bit rate up to CD quality, There are 4 different genres and it's free although donations are casually solicited. The DJ is great too. You can also get CD quality streamed through Bluesound hardware with Radio Paradise (Node II analog into a C20 McIntosh preamp) I have a wonderful restored McIntotsh MR65B FM tuner that was originally purchased by my grandfather in 69' and there are only a couple of stations in Eastsound, Washington I would even bother listening to and most of them are Canadian. Even when I lived in Portland, OR there were only a few stations that had decent programming, although the ones that did were always a treat to listen to- and I still do, I just stream them now.

  • @blipco5
    @blipco5 Před 2 lety

    I have TWO fm tuners in my stereo. One analog, one digital. I'm still trying to figure out which I like best. I'm blessed with several commercial free college stations near me. And I donate to them. It's nice to have somebody show me new music I wouldn't have chosen on my own. For free!

  • @nomorokay2
    @nomorokay2 Před 4 lety

    Hey, Paul, KPLU is one of my favourite FM stations, too. However, they went private and the employees bought the station, with help from the listeners.
    Now the station is called KNKX, since it's no longer connected with Pacific Lutheran University. Its new slogan is "KNKX connects you with jazz, blues, and NPR news!"
    KNKX is still at 88.1 FM, but with all the new condo towers in my town blocking the signal, it's really noisy in my home system now. However, I can get it on Net Radio for free. The signal is strong and clean, and the format is the same as always: jazz, blues, and NPR News. I'm glad it's still there.

  • @eugenerodriguezsolis7534

    KCSM San Mateo in California is amazing one of my favorite jazz stations also available through streaming they also stream in either 132 or 92 bit

  • @salmonline
    @salmonline Před 4 lety +2

    My Grandfather had a radio exactly like the one in your thumbnail. I wanted it after he died but was only 12 and no one would take me serious.

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 Před 4 lety +1

      The grundig radios are very nice looking. I'd love to fix up an old floorstander

  • @Mark-lq3sb
    @Mark-lq3sb Před 4 lety

    I'm happy with my McIntosh MR-88 with HD. There are a couple of University radio stations using the HD format that play good music with-in reach of my area. Fusion, Blues and some 1960s - 1970s R&R.
    McIntosh stopped making tuners that are HD capable, there latest tuner does not offer HD. I was on a audio forum and someone that works for them stated they had trouble getting particular parts for the HD section of the tuner.

  • @nathakp7223
    @nathakp7223 Před 2 lety

    Singapore has a Nice classical FM station named Symphony 92.4, they stream too.. have a listen. Full 24/7 classical.

  • @awizardalso
    @awizardalso Před 4 lety

    What bothers me is there is not many cars with manual tuning for the AM/FM radio. In my daughters Ford Focus, the 'seek' and 'scan' function doesn't stop on any radio station and just keeps running non-stop until you touch the button again and it stops on a frequency with no radio. We do have a FM station up in Akron, Ohio, WNIR 100.1 that does broadcast their content over their website. It is a talk radio station where people call in to talk about any topic. There is a 3 second delay between the content and released over the air. That gives the host time to hit the button to block out anything they say that's not nice.

  • @ggrotz4863
    @ggrotz4863 Před 4 lety

    Check out 1061 The Corner in Charlottesville. Radio the way it used to be with the addition of the Corner Lounge where visiting artists come for recording/interviewing. Also promote local artists.

  • @Peter_S_
    @Peter_S_ Před 4 lety

    The only FM I listen to is KGNU, but I enjoy streaming FM stations from places hundreds or thousands of miles away. KUTX, KOOP, and KVRX in Austin are notable for their new and obscure programming.

  • @R1947M
    @R1947M Před 2 lety

    I'm old enough to remember when FM in the Chicago area had very few commercials and a lot of classical music. I bought a used tube table radio back then. If you ever start your internet radio station I'd sure like to know about it (maybe you already did it).

  • @quagmyer7230
    @quagmyer7230 Před 3 lety

    I have a McIntosh MR 71 FM tuner with a outdoor Omni directional Magnum Dynalab - ST-2 FM Antenna that makes any FM station sound crispy clean.

  • @ntone7
    @ntone7 Před 4 lety

    I only occasionally listen to FM radio so I just use my Denon AV Receiver. For those who are really into FM radio perhaps this Accuphase unit is one of the good ones that’s still in production?

  • @seanmangan2769
    @seanmangan2769 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm lucky enough to live near Boston and listen to FM radio all the time. It's much better for my brain than watching TV.

    • @johnrobinson357
      @johnrobinson357 Před 4 lety

      I am 55 miles to your north west, north of worcester near the N.H. border. With a roof top yagi i get just about all the stations i want.
      but i mostly restore and use late 70's and early 80's receivers ( technics , yamaha ) for sound quality and receiver performance.
      After the early 90's tuner quality really took a nose dive across the board. My old junk gets WERS with almost no hiss and WGBH boston sounds better than most of the affiliates in the region - to my ear and speakers anyhow.....

    • @seanmangan2769
      @seanmangan2769 Před 4 lety

      @@johnrobinson357 I love the old Yamaha stuff, used to sell it back in the 70s.

  • @tweakerman
    @tweakerman Před 4 lety

    Here in the uk, we the excellent bbc, radio 3, has outstanding sound quality, if you have a rooftop aerial, there's no hiss, but you have to have a rooftop aerial.

  • @JessHull
    @JessHull Před 4 lety +4

    "beemp boomp boomp"
    -Paul McGowan 2019

  • @marciojpcardoso
    @marciojpcardoso Před 4 lety

    I like some FM stations but I think it's really easy to solve the problem by just connecting a device capable of receiving the signal. I think it should be good enough.

  • @juliaset751
    @juliaset751 Před 4 lety

    I used to listen to FM a lot in the 70’s and 80’s, those were the days when FM was my constant companion. I had a Magnum Dynalab tuner that was very expensive, but worth every penny when listening to a good station. Now it’s just bad programming and bad sound, TV has gone that way too- not worth my time. BTW, one of my favorite local stations used to bring people into the studio to play live; you may want to consider that with your new station.

  • @Spock105
    @Spock105 Před 4 lety

    Still listen every day FM with my Marantz 2130 . It's coax kabel connected . Very nice sound.

  • @luctardif8444
    @luctardif8444 Před 4 lety

    I have a Yamaha t-s500 tuner and I love it. The sound is way better than internet radio and we have very good non commercial radio stations in Quebec City. (Classical radio, university radio, radio Canada , etc.)

  • @charlesnr
    @charlesnr Před 4 lety

    The best MP3 internet radio station I have found is Classic FM, a commercial English station. It sounds better than regular US FM stations. Perhaps, they run flat without the std. 50 or 75 us emphasis on regular FM.

  • @BTom16
    @BTom16 Před 4 lety

    I like having a tuner in my system. It hasn't been turned on in 15 years but sometimes I walk into the room and it feels like 1978 when I had about 75 records and a couple of hundred cassettes. The equipment was worse back then but the enjoyment was better.

  • @cuttinchops
    @cuttinchops Před 4 lety +2

    FM is dying because of the such bland, repetitive and "Walmart of radio" commercial stations. It's happening in TV too, sad!

  • @bryanherr1093
    @bryanherr1093 Před 4 lety

    I am thankful for living in the Twin Cities where we have some fantastic radio stations here.

  • @Roxor128
    @Roxor128 Před 4 lety

    Alternate route: Build a software-defined radio receiver. That way you can pick up anything with the appropriate software update.

  • @platonicguardian6923
    @platonicguardian6923 Před 4 lety

    I would never buy an audio system without AM/FM radio, and I live in California!

  • @scottyo64
    @scottyo64 Před 4 lety

    Like I have stated many times I listen to FM and AM daily. I stream at times, used to have XM but having FM and AM just is likecan old friendcwhether in the Jeep or at home.

  • @ThinkingBetter
    @ThinkingBetter Před 4 lety +1

    As cars increasingly have CarPlay, Android Auto, Sirius XM, simple Bluetooth or even mobile modem allowing streaming, FM radio will go away eventually. But for now in some areas, FM radio is more reliable than mobile streaming. Also, analog FM radio is complemented by digital HD radio in north America and DAB radio in Europe using the FM radio frequencies. Reality is people are preferring “on demand” content where they can choose more exactly what they want to hear and the internet is winning for that reason.

    • @FSXgta
      @FSXgta Před 4 lety

      DAB+ sounds like garbage. In norway they shut down FM and now we have worse coverage and the sound is worse

    • @ThinkingBetter
      @ThinkingBetter Před 4 lety

      FSXgta⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻⸻ Yes, too much compression is too often making digital radio poor performing for DAB, HD radio and Satellite radio. I can’t stand digital audio of this sort.

  • @johnnorris9066
    @johnnorris9066 Před 4 lety

    Hi Paul I really like your idea for your radio station good luck with it. I don’t know if you can get it outside the UK but the BBC sounds app has content from BBC Radio 3 where they have amazing live concerts, interviews and performances by the classical world’s greatest artists there’s even some jazz, world music and experimental pieces. I would really recommend it to any of your followers 👍

  • @taineasy
    @taineasy Před 4 lety +2

    I primarily listen to FM . In Toronto Canada we have one of the best Jazz stations in the world. Its a not for profit station that has been around for years. I also have sirius and occasionally listen to channel 67 Jazz but its no where near as good as 91.1 Jazz FM. At home I have a technics st-8600 Tuner with a 5 gang tuner. Its great and pulls and locks channels like nobody's business.

    • @c31979839
      @c31979839 Před 4 lety

      91.1! Probabaly one of the best jazz stations I've ever heard. One of my go-to stations to listen to in the evening.

    • @nostro1001
      @nostro1001 Před 4 lety

      @ Mike...great to hear. I think FM radio, (non for profit), has plenty to offer of all genres. I'm not sure how it is in other countries exactly, but I suspect with a little searching on the dial many places have college/university, independent etc channels.
      Seems to me reading the comments and listening to Paul, that few make the effort to find what's out there or bother to give them a listen, largely assuming they are all commercial garbage run by big conglomerates. Pity that....keep on enjoying your jazz station. Cheers!

    • @ecyfoto
      @ecyfoto Před 4 lety

      I can’t listen to satellite radio. Hurts my ears!

    • @nostro1001
      @nostro1001 Před 4 lety

      @@ecyfoto I don't know what satellite radio is?

    • @ecyfoto
      @ecyfoto Před 4 lety

      nostro1001 Sirius is satellite radio.

  • @turbomustang84
    @turbomustang84 Před 4 lety

    If you pick up a higher end vintage tuner you can get much better sound than anything made currently

  • @stevefick3919
    @stevefick3919 Před 4 lety

    That would be cool! Especially the Rock station! I know the FM stations in our area suck now. The one I listen to has changed their format from "Classic Rock" to just "Rock" . A lot of '80's junk I can't stand now. They also had "Psychedelic Psunday" which I LOVED. Now gone.
    I'd certainly listen to what you guys would come up with.

  • @jonpatrick66
    @jonpatrick66 Před 10 měsíci

    I listen to my separate fm tuner daily and nights too! Love a few good stations 💯

  • @Charonupthekuiper
    @Charonupthekuiper Před 4 lety

    Depressingly similar story in Britain, commercial radio owned by big companies and digital audio lousy audio quality. The Government even wanted to turn off FM and sell the bandwidth, but backed down.

  • @andrewmanus5686
    @andrewmanus5686 Před 4 lety

    Big cities have a lot of hd stations. If i had to pick one it would be broadcast hd....no internet bandwidth or power issues...or software issues

  • @JL-qo7cs
    @JL-qo7cs Před 4 lety

    I love radio. AM, FM, talk radio especially. I like audio equipment also. I appreciate radio in my equipment.

  • @alanaldrich8069
    @alanaldrich8069 Před 4 lety +1

    I cannot wait to hear your Internet Radio. please keep us informed.

  • @pauldavies6037
    @pauldavies6037 Před 4 lety

    IT's a shame everything is becoming internet based.Still the UK has "Radio1,2,3,4,5 and more dedicated each to current pop,classic rock,classical music,speech,drama,sport etc on good quality FM and DAB, not so good quality and signal coverage .Plus many local radio stations of a high standard manly FM .Most phones have an FM radio built in and house and car radios still I look forward to Paul's service though good luck !

  • @stinkycheese804
    @stinkycheese804 Před 4 lety

    I'm seeing a bit of tunnel vision here. There is demand in the US, it is not different than Singapore (who also has internet and streaming, lol), which is why there is a large assortment of receiver-amps in the US market.
    Many of us do casual listening, background music. It is not some "big event" where we want to involve a client "computer" to interface the internet and manually set streaming up. We want to just tune to a station playing the type of music we want to hear, with minimal fuss or extra expense doing so.
    While this might make me seem like a non-audiophile with simple needs, it is a bit of the opposite for the former. I have built amps and headamps, and worked as an engineer at a radio station, though I usually tune to a different station. It's not station loyalty.

  • @bikdav
    @bikdav Před 3 lety

    Paul: When are you starting PS Audio Internet Radio {or whatever it will be called}? I’d like to listen in and give it a try.

  • @psider1522
    @psider1522 Před 4 lety +1

    wow, the internet radio you're planning sounds exciting! I'm guessing the format for streaming will be FLAC?

  • @Andrewatnanz
    @Andrewatnanz Před 4 lety

    Its true. I have to shop late 1970s early 1980s in order to get a decent tuner. I like the local high school radio station the best.

  • @jeremytravis360
    @jeremytravis360 Před 4 lety

    We are spoiled for choice in London when it comes to sound quality of FM radio. I still have a lot of FM radios and Tuners.

  • @andrewlutes2048
    @andrewlutes2048 Před 4 lety

    To the consumer the cost of FM was originally only for the device. Now, we pay way more for a device than a radio costs, we pay exorbitant ISP fees to despicable companies so the devices are actually useful, and pay again for streaming service(es) most of whose programming aren't all that much better than Clearchannel's (Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora, etc.), and don't treat artists well. (KCRW Santa Monica is cool though, with a good variety of DJs who know their stuff AND treat artists well.)

  • @Antoon55
    @Antoon55 Před 4 lety

    I can't wait for the new station! :) Hurry up ;)

  • @6165134
    @6165134 Před 4 lety

    Continues to listen and enjoy my Tuner Box S2 by Pro-Ject.

  • @Nomad-Rogers
    @Nomad-Rogers Před 4 lety

    Because of internet Radio. That is it and the website of the of the FM station Like WSKZ KZ106.5 in Chattanooga tn steaks there audio 24/7 with perfect clarity. I wish they would make the Digital Fm signal compatible with Digital ATSC so Digital televisions could receive digital FM in stead of the current digital standard HD radio this would increase the popularity of th radio due to pure convenience you could probably get 24 bit audio.

  • @mylign
    @mylign Před 4 lety +1

    A fellow wwdtm aficionado here!!

  • @bilguana11
    @bilguana11 Před 4 lety

    I use the Yamaha CX-5200 pre-pro which has a tuner.

  • @ptr3671
    @ptr3671 Před 4 lety

    Paul , if you can , take a listen to JAZZ.FM. It is a public radio station which is a registered charity, operating out of Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

  • @TheTrueVoiceOfReason
    @TheTrueVoiceOfReason Před 4 lety

    The best part of FM currently is the LPFM set. These little guys, 5 watts or less, do it for the sheer love of the medium and music. I discovered one a few years ago, WZML, who also do simulcasting online. Their sets are usually a decent mix of the more popular rock genre, but often alternative recordings. Ie, not the album cuts. That and many lesser known recordings or rarely heard tracks that take you way back in time. (At least they do for me)
    Yeah, the IHeart and ClearChannel shlock has really degraded real broadcasting. Reminds me of the WKRP episode where the competing station tried to lure Venus away only to find it was an automated station and he was to be the token ethnic personality. Oh the non-humanity of it all.
    Now take me back to the AM days of Texaco Theater and I'd be really happy. Those were true golden years.

  • @timothystockman7533
    @timothystockman7533 Před 4 lety

    Not only is the music on commercial FM poor, but the audio quality is awful. I have had, for years a Kenwood KT-815, which is pretty much as good as it gets, but contemporary stations sound very disappointing. But, if I needed to steer someone to a good FM tuner one of the Kenwoods from the 1980s, restored with new capacitors would be my recommendation. The KT-815 will give you 80 dB S/N at 0.04% THD in stereo mode at full quieting.

  • @rowheadrex
    @rowheadrex Před 4 lety

    Best news, I cant wait to get that channel! Please do

  • @JazzinBlues
    @JazzinBlues Před 4 lety

    Automated pap... BRILLIANT!

  • @Steve-kj9tx
    @Steve-kj9tx Před 4 lety

    I love wait wait don't tell me! Love NPR! A Way With Words is a great program too

  • @pmcbrier
    @pmcbrier Před 3 lety

    KUAA 99.9 FM salt lake city Utah
    KRCL 90.9 FM salt lake city Utah
    Both GREAT radio stations. The evening programs are the best I've found anywhere.

  • @pauldionne2884
    @pauldionne2884 Před 2 lety

    I love FM and tuners both new and vintage. FM still has that magic of snatching music out of thin air. Should be against the law!

  • @mikecampbell5856
    @mikecampbell5856 Před 4 lety

    NPR only covers the left side of the news. A real shame.

  • @dell177
    @dell177 Před 4 lety

    The majority of FM radio in Boston is pretty bad but WUMB (U Mass Boston FM radio) is a bright spot. They have a good mix of light rock, Folk, and blues; they also have artist interviews with live tracks several days a week I used to listen to WGBH every day until the benighted people running things turned it into talk radio.
    The Classical fair they used to play is now on WCRB which has it's transmitting antenna in a sewer - zero signal strength. Even with my Kenwood KT-7500 FM tuner getting WCRB without a lot of noise is very spotty. It would help a lot if I didn't have to shoot through downtown Boston (and all it's mega stations brodacasting crap 24-7) to get their signal but not much I can do about that.
    I really miss the lively FM scene we had here 10-20 years back but as things are now I can see why almost nobody makes good FM tuners anymore..

  • @drgjs
    @drgjs Před 4 lety

    Years ago, I read an article in The Audio Critic which suggests using car radios for your home tuner. Why? They're of better quality and better engineering for much less money.
    I tried it, and with great success. Home audio tuners are generally of low quality these days. But an Alpine is significantly better.
    But with that said, Paul is right on. Radio has lost its soul... And HD radio is too compressed to make it worthwhile...

    • @jamesplotkin4674
      @jamesplotkin4674 Před 4 lety +1

      I have a Dual digital tuned radio I bought on sale from Wallyworld for $10. It works great in my garage. I did have to add 12v power.

  • @wilcalint
    @wilcalint Před 4 lety

    A side note on AM Radio. The government ( FCC ) continues to promote, and support, AM Radio. Virtually every car has an AM radio in it. Because of the broadcast band and frequency of AM radio it’s dispersal pattern is wide and far.
    In the LA Basin there are two 5-Ton trucks one for the San Fernando Valley the other for LA and South. In time of disaster those two trucks can cover most of the entirety of the LA basin with emergency news and information. And most, if not all, cars can pick that up.
    That system has been in place for decades and most large metro areas have such a system.

    • @morrisonAV
      @morrisonAV Před 4 lety

      Are you referring to CONELRAD? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CONELRAD

    • @wilcalint
      @wilcalint Před 4 lety

      @@morrisonAV I'm not up to speed on the status of that right now. A few years ago I saw a news report on one of the LA TV Stations about the "Two 5-ton trucks". They were enormous things like 6-wheel drive and a 50ft mast. Broadcasting on several frequencies one of which was on the AM Band. They were staged one near downtown LA the other in the Valley. Imagine if the "Big One" hit LA and took out all AC power for a couple weeks. Most/many private cars would stil be able to use their AM radio to get emergency info.

  • @nicolajc
    @nicolajc Před 4 lety

    copper magazine is great - I have learned a lot from it

  • @triodehexode
    @triodehexode Před 4 lety

    Uk BBC Radio 4 on long wave AM and VHF FM Also DAB and streaming The content is excellent on all.

  • @render8
    @render8 Před 4 lety

    FM...? Jeez that died almost 30 years ago unfortunately, at one time it was the place to discover new artists, obscurities, and just hear music randomly... I remember keeping a pad and pen handy hoping to catch the dj running down the playlist to jot down artist, song or album names... Not anymore, sad but it's all garbage now, ad driven bs, like TV (don't watch that either)... I'm dating myself but i remember when cable tv was ad free.
    The only hope now is that perhaps you can tune in to a local college station at 2am... Lol

  • @williampearson4968
    @williampearson4968 Před 4 lety

    Best radio station for sound quality and classical music (all genres) in Chicago is 98.7 FM. Stream on wfmt.com anywhere in the world. Your viewers should check it out. Also, on Saturday nights they have a folk music program called the midnight special. One of the very best, if not the best stations in the world. FM radio in Chicago is not dead. You are right, corporate America has basically ruined FM radio with bland sameness. For live music (Chicago Symphony, Piano recitals,etc.etc.) and FM radio, I am glad to live in the big City of Chicago.

  • @markthomson4628
    @markthomson4628 Před 4 lety

    Loved your comments about streaming vs FM. Another consideration is the availability of a Quality FM station in your geographic location. One of my favourite stations is not available in the West Kootemays of BC, CKUA in Alberta. If you love Jazz24, check out CKUA's stream at ckua.streamon.fm:8000/CKUA-64k-m.mp3
    You're spot on about a lot of FM stations making their content available via streaming and the lack of quality Internet streams.
    Good luck with starting a PS Audio stream. Based on your equipment offerings, a PS Audio stream would be very welcome.

  • @tothemax324
    @tothemax324 Před 4 lety

    FM still sounds way better than the DAB+ at least in Australia it does, but I do like SBS chill on DAB+

  • @WilliamCooper2005
    @WilliamCooper2005 Před 4 lety

    I was in the colorado rockies for a month over summer. I found that fm was bad modern country or slightly less modern country. At least where i was!