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Old April 15th 05, 02:21 AM
running dogg
 
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Al Patrick wrote:

There are some large gaps in there. The SW band covers about 3-30 MHz.
It's still a start. If you can get someone to listening to some
foreign or domestic stations within those frequencies - and they enjoy
it - then they can upgrade to a "full coverage" receiver later.

It's probably still well worth money, except it doesn't seem to be be
"friendly" to some of the domestic stations. That is, it doesn't pick
up a lot of the frequencies.


That's because they broadcast so far out of band. I see that this radio
only covers the major portions of the major SW bands. If you want to
listen to something as simple as WWV you won't be able to with this
radio. If you want to listen to a station between 5800 and 5950-well
within the internationally recognized 49m band-this radio won't pick it
up. Even the major Degen/Kaito and Tecsun/Eton/Grundig models are
general coverage, meaning about 3000-22000 khz. But you can look at it
from the other end and realize that SW must be relatively popular among
the yuppie set if Sharper Image is peddling cheap junk SW radios. That
bodes well for the future of the hobby in North America, a place that
many of the major SW broadcasters have written off.


=========

robtgross wrote:

The SN400 covers FM, AM and 5.95-6.20
7.10-7.30
9.50-9.90
11.65-12.05
13.60-13.80
15.10-15.60 MHz SW

30 Memory Presets 10 FM, 10 AM, 10 SW

Size 4" * 3" * 1"

Weight 4.5 oz without 2 AA Batteries



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