Hospitals and RF noise: FM and HD radio’s strong suit

The Sangean HDR-14 AM/FM HD radio

For the past week, I’ve been away from home spending time with my mother at the hospital while she recovers from a surgery. I’ve got a number of reviews and evaluations in the pipeline, but thankfully no shortwave or HF radios on the table this week (although the ELAD FDM-S3 and CommRadio CTX-10 are just around the corner). Listening to shortwave (or even mediumwave) in a hospital room can be an exercise in futility–there are just too many devices emitting noise and the buildings are built like bunkers with incredibly thick walls to attenuate signals.

I’ve had the little Sangean HDR-14 with me, however, and have been very pleased with its ability to snag FM stations both analog and digital. I’ve also had fun discovering a surprisingly diverse FM landscape in this metro area. I haven’t snagged an AM HD station yet, but my hope is one evening I might DX one (fingers crossed and not holding my breath).

The Sangean HDR-14 (left) and CC Skywave SSB (right)

At the end of most days, I’ve been able to catch a little shortwave action with my CC Skywave SSB (pre-production) portable at the guest house where I’m staying. The evenings have been surprisingly peaceful here with only the occasional popup thunderstorm to insert a little QRN in my listening sessions.

Last night, while listening to jazz on FM, I finished reading All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr (affiliate link).

We’ve mentioned this book before and I know of at least dozen SWLing Post contributors and friends who’ve personally recommended it to me.

It is a superb novel and will, no doubt, tug at the heart strings of any radio enthusiast or WWII history buff. Highly recommended!

Indeed, last night I couldn’t fall asleep until I finished the book around 12:30 AM!

And mom? She’s recovering quite well and we hope will be discharged from the hospital soon.

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6 thoughts on “Hospitals and RF noise: FM and HD radio’s strong suit

  1. Tom Servo

    Glad to hear your mother is recovering well, Thomas.

    Surprisingly I’ve also had some experience with using a radio in a hospital and had a similar experience. AM was useless (I knew better than to try HF) while FM was OK but really spotty. Strangely enough the most reliable things were HD broadcasts which seemed to work fairly well even in interior first floor hallways.

    It probably helps that several of my market’s FMs are on tall tower about 15 miles north, and are all C, C0, C1 Class stations. A few also run higher power HD sidebands.

    Still, it was odd to see a 1 to 4 kW HD signal working better than the analog 100 kW equivalent.

    During those times in the hospital, radio was a really nice diversion, since the hospital wi-fi was locked down so tight that streaming media was not allowed at all. (I couldn’t even access my own website because it was “media related”!)

    Reply
  2. Steve Lebkuecher

    Thomas

    I’m sure all of us who follow your site wish your mother the very best in her recovery. I sincerely hope all is going well.

    Steve

    Reply
    1. Thomas Post author

      She has done amazingly well, Steve. It was a complicated surgery, but her recovery has been going in the right direction. Thank you.
      Thomas

      Reply

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