[Table of Contents]


[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: [ARSCLIST] Stereo records.



We did that a lot in the late 50's. We worked with a drive-in theater (remember them?) in St Cloud Minnesota. Played 1/4-inch 1/4-track stereo tapes and then the newly-released LPs before the movie. FM fed the movie speaker system and moviegoers tuned their car radios to the AM channel.

We did AM-AM stereo as well; that generally provided the best stereo tracking. AM-FM worked okay since early on, phasing wasn't important (and would have been impossible given the highly different AM and FM characteristics).

No matter the mis-matched media, the "ping-pong" stereo sounded great; in or out of phase...

And then it was on to FM-Quad in 1970. What fun!

Mark Durenberger


----- Original Message ----- From: "steven c" <stevenc@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, June 15, 2006 6:36 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Stereo records.



----- Original Message ----- From: "Michael Shoshani" <mshoshani@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
On Thursday 15 June 2006 14.14, steven c wrote:

> At a guess, I'd say radio...in particular, FM radio, which was stereo
from
> (when?).

In theory, from the very beginning, although in practice from probably
1960,
give or take three years. Armstrong gave an FM multiplexing demonstration
in
1933 or 34 that mixed a signal from NBC Red Network, one from NBC Blue
Network, a facsimile front page of The New York Times, and one other thing
I
can't recall offhand - all on the same carrier wave.

Well, I can recall an early "stereo experiment" that involved a sort-of-
local station that had both AM and FM operations...and broadcast one
channel on each for a half-hour program...

Steven C. Barr




[Subject index] [Index for current month] [Table of Contents]