Hiya... I haven't read the passport review yet. There is no question that
there is too much flutter to make ecss practical for my taste. I get the
flutter off the whip antenna and with the external wire. If you get the
fine tuning dial set perfectly, flutter is at a minimum, but still, too
noticeable. Also, even though you can get the fine tuning dial close to
being good enough to use ecss, it deteriorates and you have to re-adjust it.
So, in that sense, it's not stable enough to be set and stay set for ecss.
Then again, what's "good enough" to listen too is most certainly subjective.
For me, it had far too much flutter to use with ecss tuning and took too
much doing with the fine tuning dial.
The build of both radios seems to be good. All buttons and knobs have good
feel to them. The buttons on both radios have more of a crisp clicking
action to them rather then a soft one, but they are responsive none the
less.
One other thing about the KA1102 that is a bit imperfect is the way the
lighting works. The blue backlight in the display is just fine, but, not
all the buttons on the radio light up with equal illumination. It seems
that some of the buttons are too far away from the internal light source to
be light up very much, especially the ones directly under the display
itself. None the less, it's not a distraction at all. I like the blue
color light and I just consider it a bonus that most of the buttons light
up. Also.. As far as I know, there is no way to switch the backlight on
and keep it on. I'd prefer if I could do that.
--
Respectfully,
Michael
Home Page:
http://md_dxing.tripod.com/
Northern NJ
R75 w/DSP, Kiwa agc/sync & audio mods
G5RV & 200ft longwire w/ICE-180
MFJ-1048 preselector
SoundBlstr Live PC card w/five piece Cambridge
speakers & full software mixer/eq.
"grumpus" wrote in message
om...
"Michael" wrote in message
. net...
Good post Michael. Passport seemed to think that ECSS on the 1102 was
pretty good, that though the flutter was there it was hard to detect.
Is the flutter present on yours off the whip alone? I don't know why
this would make a difference, but just a thought. How is the build
quality of both the 1101 and the 1102? It sure looks like the the
damned Pink Chinese are on the ascendant.
Regards,
Grumpus
For anyone that is interested...
I got my Kaito KA1102 today...
When I first read about this radio and it's smaller sister the KA1101, I
became very intrigued by what I had read, and I just HAD to get one of
each
to test out :-) I already have the KA1101 and had posted my review here
a
few weeks ago.
Now... On to the KA1102
The first thing I had to try was the SSB function. It works just fine
to
hear ham and utility. I listened to a volmet weather broadcast, some
ham
and was actually able to use it with my PC to decode some morse code on
the
ham bands when I connected it to my sound card through the KA1102's
headphone jack. The range on the fine tuning dial is not too tight so
it's
easy enough to deal with.
The big let down. It's USELESS for ECSS. You cant select USB or LSB.
It's just SSB. If you turn on the SSB function while listening to AM
broadcast, it's way too fluttery to be able to listen to practically
speaking. You also need to have the KA1102 set on a specific memory
bank in
it's "page" system to be able to activate the SSB.
Also on the down side... It's got a problem with selectivity. I was
listening to the BBC on 5975, and I was hearing intermod from the CBC on
5960. I had to remove the external antenna and switch the DX/LOCAL
switch
to LOCAL in order to limit the intermod. Though, it does have a problem
here, it's not a big deal unless what your listening to is right next to
a
very strong signal.
I also have the KA1101.... It's the smaller less expensive "sister"
radio
of the KA1102. The KA1101 doesn't have SSB. Although less expensive,
the
KA1101 doesn't have the same problem with overloading. I thought that
was
ironic considering the KA1102 is more expensive. If I had a choice, I
think
I'd rather have the KA1101 just for the selectivity. My main interest
in
the KA1102 was it's price considering it has a SSB feature.
Audio quality isn't half bad, but as you would expect with such a small
radio, it's not extremely well defined. Still.. It's more then
adequate.
I've been listening to it for a few hours and it's audio doesn't wear
you
out.
So far, I think the best part is the radio's sensitivity. I used my
R-75 to
find a few weak signals to test the KA1102 on. Considering my R-75 is
connected to an elaborate outdoor antenna, the little KA1102 did very
well
so far. Still... I don't find it to be any more sensitive then the
KA1101.
Some other interesting things are the blue colored back light and the FM
bass boost. When you use this radio in FM stereo with the ear buds, it
sounds amazing. Not to mention it comes with rechargeable batteries
that
can be recharged in the radio itself. That alone is a great value added
option.
All in all, it's probably the best brand new out of the box radio for
the
money. The whole reason to buy this radio I think, is price. It's just
under $100.00 and it has SSB and all the other features. I think
though,
if you could spend another $50.00 for a radio, you'd be better off with
a
Sony 7600gr or YB-400. That's where the question lies with the KA1102.
It
lies between a dirt cheep portable that hardly works as a shortwave
radio
and a more expensive portable like the 7600gr that outperforms it.
Do you save $50.00 by buying the KA1102 over the 7600gr or are you
spending
$100.00 of your money unwisely by not spending a $50.00 more to get
better
radio ???
Respectfully,
Michael