4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
So whatever happened to this sound craze from the 70s. I remember going to a William's Magnavox store out on Plainfield in Grand Rapids to check this out. They had a really small room there where you could stand in the middle and listen to their demo of a motorcycle circling the room. The only radio station that I recall using that technology was WGRD FM. I do have a 4 channel 8-track player/recorder I picked up somewhere along the line but I'm not sure if it still works.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
I remember when W4 106fm was Quad. I still have a few W4 Quad 106fm t-shirts.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
Yes, W4 was a Detroit original. The studio was located on Jefferson Ave. 2930 East Jefferson to be exact, I know that place well.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
Since I'm not in the business and have always lived near Grand Rapids, I had to look up the history of W4....quite a story! I should have counted the number of program changes.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
Today that building is now used by, The Cannabis Counsel and a group of doctors for medical marijuana. The best years of W4 106.7 were, when Gordon Mc Lendon owned the station.bugzapper wrote: ↑Wed Mar 03, 2021 9:37 pmSince I'm not in the business and have always lived near Grand Rapids, I had to look up the history of W4....quite a story! I should have counted the number of program changes.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
Before McLendon and WWWW, 106.7 was WDTM, into the late 1960s.
WDTM offered an eclectic programming mix, with classical, jazz, spoken word and anything else they could find a host for. Each of its shows were kind of "free form" within themselves. It was a commercial station, but I think they also solicited direct listener support. I do remember Joe McClurg as one of the hosts, mostly on weekends. WDTM deserves a fan site somewhere, but I've yet to see one and I haven't found any air checks.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
You may want to look up Don Schuster. Don was at W4 when they were an Oldies type station in 1969 or 1970, he might have some pre-W4 history info. I think Don is still in the Detroit area.SolarMax wrote: ↑Thu Mar 04, 2021 4:48 pmBefore McLendon and WWWW, 106.7 was WDTM, into the late 1960s.
WDTM offered an eclectic programming mix, with classical, jazz, spoken word and anything else they could find a host for. Each of its shows were kind of "free form" within themselves. It was a commercial station, but I think they also solicited direct listener support. I do remember Joe McClurg as one of the hosts, mostly on weekends. WDTM deserves a fan site somewhere, but I've yet to see one and I haven't found any air checks.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
I remember riding in my mom’s cousins mid 1970’s Thunderbird having a quadraphonic stereo system. She put a 8 track in and the sound range and dynamics were amazing. You could hear specific different instruments in one speaker clearly
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
I thought it was very appropriate that one of the few Quadraphonic stations in the country was WWWW W-4 (4-channel) in Detroit. Had a Toledo DJ friend with a quad system to decode it. Used to be on the cover of the 1972 Lafayette Radio Electronics Catalog IIRC. Also, had 3 competing Quad LP formats, SQ, QS and RCA-CD4 which had a subcarrier rather than a matrix decoding system? However, the easiest Quad route was 4-track reel to reel decks and 8 track players that truly had 8 tracks: two Programs of 4 channels each. It really was a design ahead of it's time as it was close to the Dolby Surround from the VHS days, but more discrete as it was more 4.0 than 3.1 when I heard it. Wonder W4 was quad when Howie Stern was there and they did the format flip?
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
I know there were some experiments using C-QuAM to pass Quad audio way back when, and it evidently worked.
I confirm all my information through a high, white whore's souse!
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
Ed Joseph, let me check with Mr. Motorola and see if he can run some QUAD testing audio over WION next time he's doing an overnight tune-up?
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Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
WIQB in Ann Arbor (now the current W4) was "QuadRock 103" around 1975-76.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
From a Google Street View of that address, it appears the STL tower/antenna is still there.Deleted User 15506 wrote: ↑Wed Mar 03, 2021 5:32 pmYes, W4 was a Detroit original. The studio was located on Jefferson Ave. 2930 East Jefferson to be exact, I know that place well.
Re: 4 Channel, Quadraphonic Sound
I still wonder about the early stereo esperimants where one chan of audio went over aN AM station and simulcast other channel on an affiliated FM transmitter . I actually saw a few receivers that had dual tuners set up to do the reception of AM/FM Stereo sound.