230 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
230 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
SCA: FM Radio's Alter-Ego - The Radio The FCC Doesn't Want You To Own
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From March, 1989 Monitoring Times. By Bruce F. Elving, Ph.D
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It has been ignored by the consumer press. The high fidelity and stereo
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industry doesn't talk about it. Certainly, few FM listeners are aware of it.
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"It" is a medium of communication available free for the taking in almost all
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parts of North America -- namely, FM subcarrier broadcasting.
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First demostrated in 1953 by FM's inventer, the late Edwin H. Armstrong,
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multiplexing of more than one program on a single station's carrier was
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authorized to begin in the United States by the Federal Communications
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Commission in 1955. Long since eclipsed in the public eye by another
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multiplexing development, FM stereo, subcarrier FM has been largely the
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province of special interest groups, instead of the public.
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FM-SCA listening has enjoyed a steady growth in the last 30 years, thanks
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largely to magazine articles showing how to assemble FM subcarrier contruction
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kits and to companies supplying the components and radios to make such
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listening possible.
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Indeed, the distinction between FM-SCA and FM stereo, both of which can take
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place on the same FM station, is blurring. Both are "multiplexed" transmissions
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and both can be enjoyed by the public in large numbers, the difference being
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that stereo FM is identical to the regular FM program, while SCA FM is [almost
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always] different from the regular FM station's programming.
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Not all FM stations make use of an SCA, but I am sure more would, if the
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owners had personal access to SCA radios in order to explore the fascinating
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and often money-making things that can be done with this wonderful medium. SCA
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can be received as clearly and reliably in the local service area as the
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regular FM station.
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My FM ATLAS AND STATION DIRECTORY has publicized the existence and nature of
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SCA programming, and this led to curiousity as to how SCA-FM can be received.
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This caused us in 1977 to explore the business, legal and technical aspects of
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SCA tuning-in. In the years since, we've offered SCAdapter devices to the
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public, as well as conversions of radios to pick up SCA transmissions.
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In our early days we fought off several threats of lawsuits from entrenched
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SCA interests who would like to keep SCA private and out of the public's
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radios. More recently, the FCC deregulated SCA, allowing more uses of the SCA
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signal, including data services and freeing stations from having to get
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specific advance approval before embracing an SCA ["Subsidiary Communications
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Service"]
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That term was changed to SCS ["Subcarrier Communications Service"], with
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this article using the letters SCS or SCA interchangeably. Canada has a similar
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service called SCMO.
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In deregulating the medium, the FCC utilized our data showing the degree of
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SCA utilization nationally by broadcasters. In so doing, the FCC announced its
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intent to encourage broadcasters to make greater use of SCA, and it created a
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new SCS channel, 92 kHz, which enabled broadcasters to make greater use of
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their station bandwidth.
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The two common subcarrier frequencies are thus 67 kHz (the granddaddy of
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them all), and 92 kHz. One FM station can send out all three programs
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simultaneously -- a stereo program to its regular audience and two separate
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programs on SCA, such as a radio reading service to the blind at 67 kHz and
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foreground music on 92 kHz.
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Another channel -- 57 kHz -- is in use exclusively for data. Data includes
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highway condition alertings in many metro areas and digital paging. It is a
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channel not favored by at-home listeners, because it is devoid of talk or music
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programming.
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LEGALITIES
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Because FM-SCA is a technology which is multiplexed and "readily available"
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to large numbers of the public, tuning in its transmission is no more sinister
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than owning and using a police radio, public service band scanner, radar
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detector, listening to FM stereo, or watching color television. Virtually all
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laws prohibiting the use of such devices have been struck down by the courts as
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being in violation of the First Amendment to the Constitution.
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Apparently, however, government can control where you can use these devices;
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such as forbidding the use of scanners in private automobiles. Similarly, you
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should be able to listen to background music on SCA in the privacy of your
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home, but not in a business that you own if it might deprive the music company
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of rental income for equipment to play the music in the store.
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You enjoy further legal protection if the radio, even though modified with
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an SCA circuit, is a radio designed primarily to tune in other transmissions
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(like regular FM and AM), rather than its being designed solely for subcarrier
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reception.
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Anybody questioning the legality of tuning in SCA should contact local
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broadcasters for a letter of permission authorizing tuning in their subcarriers
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for noncommercial, hobby purposes. Please send us any such letters you receive
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from broadcasters.
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All FM stations known to have an SCA are listed in the latest edition of the
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FM ATLAS; write the author for price and ordering information. The very
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distinction between who is an "authorized user" and who is a "pirate" is a fine
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one, and one that even the courts would probably shy away from.
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Although at this writing the FCC is unwilling to encourage the use of
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tunable SCA radios, the FCC noted that the frequencies received by many
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electronics devices, including scanners, can be used for unprotected
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communications as well. "Thus, the suggestion that the Commission require that
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reception of certain frequencies be blocked or filtered is not a practical
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one."
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The FCC pointed out that it is not a guarantor of any electronics privacy
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protections. It is even legal to eavesdrop on cellular telephones, using
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commonly-available UHF TV sets in the channels 79-83 range.
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SCA or SCS is a valuable and relatively unexploited resource available to
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the public and to the FM broadcaster alike. Despite the use of better
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transmitting equipment, some broadcasters still entertain prejudice against
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SCA, thinking that subcarrier use will somehow compromise the quality of their
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main channel signal. The FCC has helped by allowing stations to increase their
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overall modulation to compensate for having an SCA, and there is no evidence
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that having an SCS will decrease a station's ratings.
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The needs of a growing population to be better informed about specialized
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matters will dictate more uses of SCA, rebounding to the benefit of FM stations
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and the public alike. By taking SCA "out of the closet," our efforts could
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result in SCA's being included in every FM radio sold in the United States in
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the future.
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PROGRAMMING
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SCA's programming has considerably broadened since 1977, when most of the
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use of the medium was background music to stores. Radio reading services to the
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blind were just getting underway; they are now found in most metropolitan
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areas, or across entire states, usually on the subcarriers of public stations.
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Overlapping reading services can be tuned in in such areas as Wichita, Kansas
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and along the Minnesota-Wisconsin borders.
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It is a pity that most SCA radios are fixed tuned, getting only one station,
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and not allowing blind citizens who travel or who live in areas having
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overlapping signals to tune in all that they could. There is ethnic programming
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in many major markets, at either 67 or 92 kHz. Foreground or light rock music
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predominate on 92 kHz. Many stations have an easy-listening SCA at 67 kHz. With
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the demise of easy-listening from many commercial FM stations, SCA remains the
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only way for millions of people to hear that format on radio.
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In certain areas of the country you can tune in religion, medical news,
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relaying of sports and special events, or even AM stations on SCS. With many AM
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stations having financial troubles, it might make sense for them to direct
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their efforts to being on the SCA of a nearby FM station than face the prospect
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of ultimately closing down.
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Listeners with radios so equipped could hear the regular FM program, and
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then flipping a switch, hear an SCA containing their favorite AM station. SCA
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has a monaural signal with a bandwidth up to 7,000 Hz, or about as good as the
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best AM stations send out. Its benefits include coverage range similar to the
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main station stereo signal, and the ability to broadcast a whole new program
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without having to create new transmitters, build new towers, or pay the power
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bills necessary for running a complete radio station. SCS is truly a piggyback
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service.
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With the FCC concerned about "deregulation," and removing artificial
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restrictions in broadcasting, the time is ripe for broadcasters and the public
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alike to turn to FM-SCA. Let its crystal-clear signal peal out with music and
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information in clear voice -- content that can inform, uplift, extoll, or even
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upbraid.
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To computer activists, SCA offers a world of data, whose unencryption can
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challenge the most technically adept. Broadcasters, however, know the world of
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sound, and it is talk and music services which they should consider when
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addressing SCA opportunities. By offering alternative programming, whether for
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profit or not, they can complement what they are doing with their main
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channels.
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A public station could provide music on its SCA while carrying news-magazine
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programs on the main channel. A commercial station could offer its regular
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music format while broadcasting sports on SCA, or vice versa. A rock station
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could offer its easy-listening or talk formatted AM signal via SCA, especially
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if the AM has coverage problems, or if located in areas having high
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concentrations of high-rise buildings with steel construction, making for poor
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AM reception (but unimpaired FM-SCA reception).
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The fact that hundreds of thousands of folks are out there with tunable SCA
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radios, as is the case in the New York city area alone, should be of little
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concern to the stations or the SCServices. The public at large may have some
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curiousity about hearing the reading service station, ethnic programming,
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medical news, or background music, but this is a transitory interest, far
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eclipsed by the tunings-in of those to whom such broadcasts are intended.
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Indeed, this large audience is something that could be programmed to and
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nurtured.
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Third parties can get into the SCAct by approaching the manager of a local
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FM station with ideas as to how its SCS could be providing a profitable or
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meritorious service in exchange for a nominal monthly rental to the station.
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SCStations are free of such FCC restrictions as the equal time requirement in
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political broadcasting, although ultimately the FM station licensee is
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responsible to the FCC for the contracts it has with the people to whom it
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leases an SCA, and for having a general knowledge of the nature of the SCA
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eminations, including foreign language or what type of data is being sent out
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to computers, pagers, and similar instruments.
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Reading services on SCA get away with audio pornography that would not be
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tolerated by most stations if it were on a main carrier, and you can pick up
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private point-to-point messages on SCStations having tone-and-voice paging
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services.
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To the casual listener or would-be SCA broadcaster, the opportunity is there
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for a new form of electromagnetic discovery. Not only are the programs
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different, but the reception characteristics differ. Some stations run their
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SCA only part of the time. Others run different services on the same channel at
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different times, while still others experiment with it, sometimes turning the
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signal on seemingly only for the engineer's amusement.
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Even trying to find out information from some SCA stations can be far from
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routine. Not everybody employed at the station knows that an SCA exists or what
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it is used for -- and if they know, they may be paranoid about it and not tell
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you. Yet, it behooves those employed at an FM station to find out about its
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subcarriers. The SCA may be helping to make the station more profitable, and
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make possible the paying of your salary.
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Listeners should be aware, too, that many a public or religious FM station
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that may be begging you for funds could be raking in the dollars by offering
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for-profit data, music, paging or other services -- something they're not very
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likely to mention, but nevertheless a significant source of income or potential
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income.
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Being able to tune in SCA at home, ona portable, or on a car radio is the
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absolute elitism in radio listening. You are in a class unlike 99 percent of
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your neighbors. Considering that SCS is sent out with only 10 percent of the
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energy that the main FM station uses, reception of SCS under most conditions is
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surprisingly good and uncritical when the receiving equipment is properly
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installed and used, although it does suffer from multipath distortion and
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crosstalk problems.
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To get good reception, place your radio in a spot getting a clear signal
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from the FM station with no multipath interference.
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Until the day comes that you can visit your favorite store and buy an FM-SCA
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radio, you may have to use some ingenuity in tuning in SCA. It should be well
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worth the effort to familiarize yourself with this medium -- and the best way
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to do so is with your own FM-SCS radio or adapter unit.
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Dr. Bruce F. Elving is editor of the FM ATLAS AND STATION DIRECTORY and
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FMedia! Readers may contact the author at Adolph, Minnesota 55701.
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-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-=*=-
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Most music is entertainment and is meant to capture and hold your attention.
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Yet, research has proven that when properly arranged and recorded, music can be
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used to do just the opposite. It can help people concentrate better on whatever
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they are doing and reduce the distraction of noise at the same time.
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Why should background music be used instead of playing other sources, such
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as AM-FM radio? Playing radio's commercials in the workplace does not make good
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business sense, especially when it's playing competitor's commercials, and
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could require the nuisance of registration and payment of music license fees.
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If a tape player is used, it would need time-consuming care in maintenance and
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cleaning. Tapes must be changed. Music quickly becomes repetitive.
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Background music can keep shoppers in a store longer, while "foreground
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music" is designed to meet the need of businesses wanting a more contemporary
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sound. Foreground music is usually played at a louder volume and is meant to be
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consciously listened to.
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Inspirational Audio Music by Roy Swafford is a music format designed to
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create a Christian atmosphere in a business. Most background music services
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utilize satellites to send the programming to the individual stations, which
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send them out in turn by FM-SCA or SCS.
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An engineer at KHOZ-FM 102.9 Harrison, Arizona is quoted: "Most satellite
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receivers can receive audio subcarriers like Muzak and it is not illegal to
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listen to them. It is also legal to purchase an SCA receiver. Yes, you are
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eliminating the background music companies who charge a fee, but that's only in
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terms of businesses, not for the private individuals. There is no such law that
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says, 'all must pay a fee who listen to SCA'."
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-=*=- End
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