Indeed, Redhat! I worked at several AM stations with old arrays that were fine with the old tube transmitters, but had problems when upgrading to solid state transmitters, *especially* those with pulse Width modulators in them. And since a vast majority of AM stations have to reduce power at sunset, if not change their patterns completely, this compounded the issue greatlly since some stations actually had to switch transmitters and tower sites. So, in those cases there are even more acres of steel and copper to try to make act "friendly" to newer gear. Some AM stereo sites had to roll off at around 7kHz to keep these newer rigs from shutting off. Many had to give up asymmetrical modulation as well. WKNX in Saginaw, MI was one such beast, WTAC in Flint another. WTAC finally moved to a new site back around the turn of the century, and ended up having to modify their license to cover at 443 watts instead of the 1kW because, even though the new towers were broadband enough, the TX still had major issues with the AM stereo.
With all the problems some AM's have just doing analog, full digital will be the gun that they shot their balls off with should they attempt that. But, honestly, none of these problem sites I've known over the years even bothered to try HD, so...