Thread: S 350 DL
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Old April 5th 07, 11:02 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
SWL-2010 SWL-2010 is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Dec 2006
Posts: 25
Default S 350 DL


"Roadie" wrote in message
oups.com...
On Apr 5, 10:52 am, Count
wrote:
On Thu, 5 Apr 2007 14:37:55 UTC, "Roadie" wrote:
On Apr 4, 7:29 pm, (Michael Black) wrote:
"SWL-2010" ) writes:
I havn't had time to sit down and tune it much yet, but so far so

good. I
can't detect any drift to amount to anything. The sound is great.

The two
tone controls make it rich, or flat, any way you want it. And so

far, like
my older S350, the sensitivity is very good. I've used my S350 a

great deal,
so I thought I would get the newer verision since the price was

right at
only a hundred bucks.


What some people forget is what it was like to have a low end

receiver
forty years or so ago.


I bought a Hallicrafter's S120A (as I've mentioned before, it was a

solid
state receiver) in the summer of 1971, and paid something like $80,

maybe a
bit more, here in Canada. It was about the cheapest new receiver I

could
buy, and it was barely within my price range.


It got the really strong signals, and not much else. It overloaded

badly,
it seemed to be from FM broadcast stations or maybe TV. The BFO was

so
weak that it wasn't useable for receiving SSB. The dial had all

kinds of
exotic locations listed on it, but not only was the calibration way

off,
but frequency readout was like "it's closer to the .5 than the .0

mark".
It had horrible backlash on the tuning knob. It was awful.


I claim it was the world's worst shortwave receiver, but I suspect

it
wasn't that different from many of the low end solid state receivers

from
the period, before real advancements had been made in making good

solid
state shortwave receivers. We suffered through them because we

couldn't
afford anything better.


I imagine a $20 shortwave portable from Radio Shack today couldn't

be
worse than that old Hallicrafter's. Plus, you'd get a digital

readout,
and likely the tuning knob (if it wasn't tuned by up/down buttons)

would
have less backlash than that first receiver of mine.


That doesn't mean that relative to better receivers of today the low
end are perfect, merely that they can't be worse, and may be better
for the simple reason that design has changed.


Michael


I think an old Hallicrafters S120A, Lafayette HA230 or Realistic
DX150b are good examples of radios that were for very good reasons
popular once upon a time. They can be fun to spin the dials on even
today. Ultimately however, I think they serve as a benchmark from
which to measure how far radio technology has advanced.


It would not be difficult to find a digitally tuned portable priced at
$50.00 to $100.00 that will substantially out perform any of those
oldies. But it won't look or feel like a bandspread tuned receiver
either, and it won't give the tactile and aural pleasure of slowly
turning a weighted bandspread knob and listening carefully as stations
gradually come into and out of tune. Eventually, when finding a
specific station or jumping from band to band goes to slowly the game
gets a little old.


My first sw radio was an S-120, my mother got it for me for Christmas
at Sears. It was terrible on accuracy, not very selective, but when
you are 12 years old, hearing world stations was exciting. I think
that I got over 40 countries QSL'd and many states(from OK at the
time). Now, I have two restored boatanchors: An S-38 and its bigger
twin, a Lafayette HE-10, both provide the experience you mention: the
fun of seeing the old dial lamps and turning the big dials looking for
that elusive station.

--
"What do you mean there's no movie?"- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Probably the most satisfaction I got from tuning a bandspread receiver
was with a Kenwood R300. It just felt good to look at and use and it
did the job reasonably well. And the xtal marker helped in some
situations.



A Kenwood R-300? I have one sitting right next to me right now. It's one of
my favorites. It's a big beautiful old black receiver in very good
condition, and I use it everyday. It has plenty of controls, and if you get
it calibrated just right, mine is pretty accurate. But the sensitivity is
the great part. Mine doesn't miss anything. I also use my old Drake SSR-1 a
lot too. The Wadley Loop is very accurate. All you do is set the band
switch. Tune in the MHz, and then just tune the main tuning dial for KHz,
and it's right there. It's in very good condition too. I use the Kenwood
and the Drake when I just want to slowly go up and down bands. I could not
even say how enjoyable they are.


I owned a National HRO-500 for a while, and turning that massive bank-
vault tuning knob was unadulterated pleasure. It was a royal PITA to
tune and otherwise move around the bands with though.


I've never tuned a National, but I would love to.