Saturday 22 June 2013

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I went out and paid for a DAB car radio when they first became available. When a signal was available the reception was excellent but far too often all signal was lost and then I had to retune to FM. I had to retune so often I got fed up with DAB and when I changed cars did not bother with it. Until the coverage is improved DAB will not become standard. They should put the traffic channel on to a carrier like they have in Germany so that important information breaks into whatever the driver is listening to, be that CD, tape, MP3/4 or radio then it would be worth having.

Seriously though DAB will have to come to most cars. Isn’t it better that this radio station is having a good trial so that it’s really useful when most people need it? And just because most local radio stations have, say hourly traffic reports doesn’t make them useful having a channel devoted to it means you get traffic information when you want it.

UK DAB probably needs an upgrade to the later version used outside the UK penalty for the UK being an early entrant. Annoying, but a fact of life.

availability of it is so restricted by the small number of DAB sets in cars that you have to wonder who the service is for. This sort of service is readily available over the internet already by groups such as ourselves and others. Traffic Radio should not be funded by the taxpayer and this waste must be stopped. Minister Mike Penning said: is important that the Highways Agency helps people plan their journeys and avoid traffic jams, but given the financial crisis this country faces it is vital that we ensure every pound is spent wisely.

Local radio TA bulletins seem to have a random life of their own. Kick in areas a hundred miles away or stay on when someone at a station leaves TA transmission switched on and gives you banal chat instead of R3 or R4. Content is variable. These Reports can be very handy, but we need more consistent and reliable information, which the Highways Agency is wellplaced to help with

A Governmentfunded radio station that warns drivers about traffic jams is costing taxpayers 2.8 a year even though most motorists cannot listen to it in their cars.

That’s a quarter the public cost of a papal visit. And at 500,000 people, nearly 3 times as many people have had the use of these public funds. Given that the Mail have been so supportive of the papal visit, I don’t understand their problem.

It’s OK having a DAB radio plugged into the mains as you don’t notice the meter spinning faster but use one on batteries, and they will quite literally, be discharged in no time. So, all in all, DAB radios are no good at all.

Traffic Radio, which is funded by the Highways Agency and Transport for London, broadcasts live traffic updates 24 hours a day on the internet and DAB digital radio.

TVs were no problem as the signal came in through an external aerial so all that was needed was an inline decoder. Radios however, have their aerials built internally to the tuner so you cannot convert them. When digital TV came in, noone had to buy a new telly, they just bought a digibox.

will be looking at this service closely to make sure that taxpayers money is being spent in a costeffective way. They are stamping their feet and moaning about us wicked members of the public of whom, won’t give up their conventional AM/FM radios that we all have grown up with, instead of wasting our hard earned cash on buying brand new receivers and throwing away millions of perfectly good radios of which, are completely in perfect working order.

Highways Agency can be heard on your kitchen DAB radio. From memory it is rather good and needs more extensive propagation have we really not got an FM channel available? Be more useful than the umpteenth pop channel.

锘?m of tax is wasted on traffic radio we can’t hear



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