I hate aircraft radios. I'm sure the guys in big planes have better equipment and don't suffer from this as much, but when I fly small planes, it's a complete mess of wildly different volume levels (it's fun to turn up the volume to hear a quiet person, then get blasted by the next transmission), interference, and irrelevant transmissions from a hundred miles away. Don't get me wrong, they get the job done and any change would have to be very carefully considered, but I'm always happy when I get far enough from the airport that I can turn the damned thing off.
I think a digital system could be done much better than what we have. But I'm sure it's not worth the huge effort it would take to design and build.
This is a lack of AGC (automatic gain control) - usually even on the (shortwave and Ham) radios I've seen it on, its switchable, otherwise (in certain conditions, like rapid fading) you can end up with gain pumping, which can sound like the audio is surging.
What it normally does is reduce gain on high strength signals, and increases it on weak ones to give a constant volume level.
I'm honestly surprised the radios in general aviation craft are not so equipped, as its generally a standard part of most AM radios.
Thanks, now I know what to look for next time I go equipment shopping. I'm sure many GA radios have this, but I'm using particularly low-end radios since space and power consumption are more important for what I do. Still won't fix getting an earful about skydivers at an airport a hundred miles away, but it would be an improvement!
I think a digital system could be done much better than what we have. But I'm sure it's not worth the huge effort it would take to design and build.