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Michael Black wrote: ) writes: Unrevealed Source wrote: Jim, I agree with almost everything you said. The SAT800 is one fine radio, and if I were forced to get down to only one radio (to actually listen to), that would be the one. I don't agree that it has the best audio though; perfectly acceptable but not the best. Mike has an article on his website about upgrading the speaker but that's too much trouble for me. You can run external speakers through the speaker jack output, and although it's low wattage it's plenty with small efficient speakers. Or you can run it through your home stereo system. Best audio of any radio has to be the Panasonic RF-5000A. Yes, I agree. The music and voice on broadcast signals sound wonderfully mellow and full on that radio. Later radios such as the Satellit 800 are certainly listenable, but they all suffer from the plastic box syndrome. But the speaker should have no bearing on whether to choose a given radio or not, as has been hashed out here before. Neither of us were commenting on the speaker alone. We were talking about the radio as a complete unit having excellent sound reproduction abilities. Forty and fifty years ago, only the cheap radios had built in speakers. Nonsese. Just look at all of the am and shortwave floor and table model radios some of which came with huge speakers and most all of which used wooden cases. Nonsense yourself. You are completely talking about "sound quality" and ignoring far more important issues. Grandpa's radio may have had good sound quality, but they had broad selectivity, bad dials, not great image rejection, and they usually had very limited shortwave coverage. I wouldn't even count them as shortwave radios. They were AM broadcast radios, with incidental shortwave coverage. They may have cost a pretty penny, but the money wasn't going to capability or features, and in that they are indeed cheap shortwave radios. THe HROs didn't have built in speakers. The SP-600 didn't have built in speakers. None of the Collins receivers. But those were top of the line shortwave receivers. Drop down and the cheap Ameco, receivers like the Radio Shack DX-150, the low end Hallicrafters, they had built in speakers. But then, they weren't particularly great receivers. The receivers you think are the cat's meow couldn't be fixed with something as simple as an external speaker. Yet pick any receiver today and if you lament the sound quality, it can be easily fixed by adding an external speaker. Yes, in some cases there may be an issue with a particularly bad audio amplifer. But the bottom line is a small speaker in a small plastic case, that can be easily remedied. I took issue with this because it keeps coming up. "I like this receiver, if only it had a better speaker". If the speaker is the only issue, then add that external speaker and then you've got the ideal speaker. Michael |
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