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Hello again. It was a fair few years ago now, so I had a car full of CD’s and a few FM radio stations. That was it.
This was a time before DAB radio – which gives us a wider choice of radio stations, and before DAB radio kit could be found in any car. So, once I’d exhausted my CD collection and I’d grown tired of having to copy MP3 files onto my phone each night, I decided to get a 3.5mm audio plug wired into my car radio.
Nowadays there’s endless FM broadcasting gadgets like this which will pair via Bluetooth to your phone and then output a very low-powered FM signal so that your car radio can tune in. They’re very clever and I’d recommend that you get one if you’ve got an FM radio in your car as it’s cheaper than getting a DAB radio plumbed in. You simply pair your phone with the clever Bluetooth / FM gadgets and play your local or streaming audio. It comes out your speakers and you’re ready to rock.
In years past I’ve given this whole thing a test with internet radio streams. This was back in 2011 when DAB was still fairly young and the signal in my local area wasn’t great. So instead, I used TuneIn radio on my phone and listened to a 128k MP3 stream. This then fed into my car stereo via a 3.5mm hook-up (you could use a Bluetooth connection now though).
DAB and DAB+. Mono, low bitrate audio is more common than you might think
Is in-car internet radio a reality ? - Coolsmartphone
A few years ago I bought a DAB radio.
The phone data connection was fast enough and the 128k audio stream was very clear. It opened the door to a vast range of live internet radio streams from all over the world. I could listen to stations from out of my area, from other countries and, of course, to music supplied by streaming services.
DAB radio works in a broadly similar way. It’s a digital stream which you receive in your car.
However….
That 128k audio quality isn’t always what you get. Also, just to add some complexity to the mix, there’s now different methods of encoding the audio stream. So, are you sitting comfortably? :) Then we’ll begin.
First, the “original” DAB audio signal. This is actually encoded in MP2, which is an ancestor to MP3. It’s considered a bit “old school” now.
In addition, there’s DAB+. This is encoded in aacPlus. This is a standard which uses less bandwidth whilst delivering a similar audio quality. A 48kbps DAB+ stream, roughly speaking, will sound similar to a 128kbps DAB signal.
Because the DAB+ system is three times more efficient, it means that more stations can be carried and the audio quality, to the human ear, is the same.
People switch to DAB partly for the increased choice. So, stations are stepping up to fill that requirement but reducing the signal quality to make it cheaper
I compare it to the days when my dad used to listen to his “60’s Classics” station. It was on Medium Wave and, although it was in mono and the audio quality wasn’t overly amazing, it offered the choice that wasn’t available on traditional (and popular / cluttered) FM stereo broadcasts.
So, some of the digital stations broadcasting on the supposedly superior DAB and DAB+ system are making their existence worthwhile by using lower bitrates or switching to mono.
As expected, there’s not a great deal of information around the internet telling you this. From this, we can see that Fun Kids, Jazz FM and Magic Chilled are all broadcasting 32k streams. Panjab radion runs a 56k Mono stream and Union Jack, which is proving to be quite successful at the moment, runs a 24k stream. All of these, apart from Panjab, run on the DAB+ system. It’s interesting to see that Union Jack has recorded the fastest-growing audience in the UK, despite (from the evidence we have) it using the lowest bitrate stream anywhere on digital radio.
What also gets me, and again I’m using the only evidence we have (from this page) is that new digital stations like Absolute Radio, Absolute 90s, Heart extra, Heat, Kiss. In your car you might notice the lack of stereo, but we live in strange times. The big broadcasters who run these stations know that…
1 – DAB+ is still quite “young” and doesn’t quite have the reach of DAB, so they choose mono on DAB even though it might be more cost effective to switch to stereobon DAB+.
2 – Most people use single-speaker DAB radios, or “smart speakers”, or Bluetooth speakers. So stereo isn’t a consideration. People only have one single speaker.
So right now, mono and lower-bitrate radio stations are actually more common than you think.
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