Greetings from Montana. FM would be great if there were an agreed upon convention among operators that its use would be usually confined to a few designated channels, as is generally done with SSB. FM is easy on the ears when it is full quieting. In urban areas, the usual sociopathic Channel Czars will emit gross amounts of power and because of FM's capture effect, will literally act as gatekeepers of "their" channels. SSB is much easier on power supplies, batteries, components, amplifiers and antennas having power limits. Also, it's possible to hear and understand more than one station on SSB when one is not substantially stronger, making it easier to break in, and to hear in the clear, as alluded to by Captain Kilowatt. FM is ideal for those nice rag chews and evening chats on long drives or when in a spread out caravan. If you were to draw two horizontal lines -- one for SSB and the other for FM -- originating from a point on the left representing a transmitter, extending to the right as effective ground wave communication distance, with the line dropping in height as the signal produces less response in receivers to the right, the SSB line would have a gradual slope and not precipitously drop out to the bottom noise level until it was very close to that noise level. The FM line, by contrast, would remain nearly horizontal until it reached its fringe, and would then drop like a rock into the abyss; its line would not extend anywhere near as far as the SSB signal's line would. So, it really depends upon the application, as well as the cooperative attitude of operators. With luck, it will sort itself out as SSB operation on 11M generally has. If FM-ers come to dominate channels 1-23, then there will be an exodus by many AM-ers to the LSB channels for relief, with mixed effects. The FCC has basically indicated that it will finalize an order granting the petition, which it usually does when the Electronic Industries Association gets behind something. The last time I recall the EIA being denied a petition was in the 70s when "Class E CB" was proposed, using the 220 MHz amateur band which would have ceased to be a ham band. EIA isn't the petitioner here, but supports the change. It will work out and yes, I'd expect fire sales on good AM/SSB radios as soon as the regulatory change is effective.