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Re: [ARSCLIST] FM reception way back when
Actually when the color and FM stereo rules were enacted it was required 
to remove the chrominance signal when broadcasting monochrome and the 19 
KC/s pilot tone when broadcasting monaural.  Eventually the rules were 
eliminated as the equipment got better.  (My old rule books are not at 
hand right now, otherwise I'd cite the rule numbers.)  The FM situation 
became rather perverse.  Early FM stereo receivers had  a mono-stereo 
switch, but later that became automatic in parallel with the stereo 
indicator light.  Although it is obvious like Robert said that it would 
be advantageous to both the station and listener to switch your radio to 
mono when receiving a weaker station, it soon became the opposite.  
Several manufacturers came out with FM tuners and radios that could be 
switched to receive ONLY stereo stations.  Stereo stations soon found 
out that their stations DISAPPEARED from these radios when they switched 
to mono for newscasts.  Additionally, I know there was at least one mono 
station in Philadelphia which did this--and I think that we might have 
done an experiment at our station at Temple University to see if it was 
possible for us to do it--but a mono station could mix in a 19 KC/s tone 
at a low level into their audio that could light the stereo light, turn 
on the stereo decoder, and make your station receivable on radios 
switched to receive stereo-only.  Having been the subject of a surprise 
FCC Inspection in 1965, I don't think a station would be able to get 
away with this if the FCC's TV monitoring truck rolled into town.  They 
would not consider this to be a "good engineering practice."  (You 
wouldn't believe the modulation flaw they could see on their 
oscilloscope that caused the inspection.)
I should also mention that the specs for the stereo system allow for a 
20 KHz audio response only for mono stations.   Stereo stations must 
have bandpass filters at 15 KHz to protect the 19 KHz pilot tone.  In 
the early years we found some mono stations blinking the stereo light 
with the high transients.  When I was still recording in mono on my old 
Wollensak T-1616 I found the problem that many others had with the 19 
KC/s pilot hetrodyning with the bias/erase oscillator frequency.  I 
think it was around 85 KC/s.  Most manufacturers raised it to around 125 
K within a year or two of the introduction of FM stereo.  I had to 
reduce the recording level when recording a stereo station.  I had a 
good wideband Harmon-Kardon tube mono FM-only tuner at that time (and it 
is still downstairs somewhere.)  That tuner could easily pull in NYC in 
my 11th floor dorm room in Philadelphia.  I used to listen to WBAI after 
the 99.5 station in Wilmington Del. signed off at midnight. 
When TV stereo audio was new, all of our local stations here put in 
phony-stereo generators that switched in whenever mono audio was 
detected.  I bitched and complained but it didn't help until some of my 
students went to work at the stations.  One of them reported back to me 
that the engineers at one of them (WLEX-TV, Ch 18 -- they deserve to be 
embarrassed) would laugh while watching the stereo light go on and off 
during programs where only the audience was in stereo.
Mike Biel  mbiel@xxxxxxxxx
Michael Shoshani wrote:
Robert Cham wrote:
Hi Folks,
New to the list here.  I've been a recording and radio engineer for 
more than forty years.  Speaking as the latter, I can tell you that 
FM Stereo takes about ten times as much signal as Mono.  When I was 
with Vermont Public Radio, we would turn off the stereo pilot 
whenever we broadcast news shows to increase the reach of the 
stations.  When I first started at WHA in Madison, in the early '70s, 
we would turn the pilot off for mono music recordings.
That makes sense. I noticed when I was a kid that television stations 
would turn off the chrominance signal when broadcasting black and 
white movies, leaving just the luminence. Often when they came from 
color commercials back to the movie they'd forget for a few seconds, 
and the picture would be riddled with red/blue/green snow that 
disappeared when the chrom signal was killed.  Stereo FM, if the 
signal is weak, gets all kinds of phasing errors that disappear if you 
happen to be lucky enough to have a "mono FM" switch.
Let's not discuss "stereo wide"...if God intended for us to hear 
stereo with one channel phase-inverted, He'd have put one of our ears 
on upside-down. :-)
Michael Shoshani