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![]() Brenda Ann wrote: wrote in message ups.com... dxAce wrote: wrote: Ed wrote: I thought this was kind of interesting, I do spend alot of time driving and cannot stand 98% of local radio broadcasts. I don't know the quality of this particular manufacturer. http://www.mfjenterprises.com/produc...prodid=MFJ-306 The only comments I remember reading about shortwave converters were not very good. Poor reception, lots of adjacent signal interference, etc. Additionally, tuning the shortwave bands may be a real pita unless you happen to have an analog am radio. Most cars come equipped with digital radios having 10khz channel separation. Consequently band tuning for stations will involve punching up a frquency on the AM receiver and tuning back and forth with the clarifier dial on the converter while driving down the highway at 65mph. You would be better off trying to find one of the increasingly rare after market radios designed to receive shortwave. I believe Sony still makes one. But count on only getting strong signals at night. Didn't the place known as Jackies (sp) over in Bahrain or some such carry some auto SW receivers? The rental cars we used to get in Spain, Italy and elsewhere (mid to late 70's) used to have radios with at least the 6 MHz band installed. dxAce Michigan USA This guy in the USA is apparently still selling the Sony Shortwave radio for cars: http://www.shortwavestore.com/sws/pr...5&cat=0&page=1 And the old european standby Blaupunkt has at least one radio with 49 meter and LW coverage (whoppee) for sale in Germany. It didn't appear in the UK listings for them however. http://www.blaupunkt.com/ My honest opinion is that the money and effort it will take to get shortwave coverage in a car isn't justified by the likely results. Signal strength won't be what it is in europe so reception will be subject to a lot of fading, static and car generated noise. I have had considerably better luck with shortwave reception in a car than at home, to be honest. Out on the road there is considerably less noise than at my home. Even just using the whip antenna on the radio (and I've used everything from the ultra cheap Jwin's to a Satellit 700) I get good signals on all the international broadcasters (program listening). Remember that a car radio made with shortwave in mind will make use of the same sort of front end that MW car radios have used from the beginning, thus optimizing the use of the relatively short automobile antenna. Think how well that antenna works for MW reception.. for SW it would be more efficient. As for fading, that's a given on SW, just as it is for MW at night. Anyone who listens to SW regularly expects and accepts it. I've used a 2010 in the car and gotten decent performance on stronger stations. Dxing from inside a steel enclosure is difficult...;-) As you mentioned radios designed for receiving shortwave will do very well. The shortwave converters can work after a fashion however finding and clarifying shortwave stations with a digital AM radio that tunes in 10khz increments will at best be labor intensive and probably quite frustrating. Listening to shortwave is a bit of a challenge to begin with, but the result can be satisfying with the right equipment. A shortwave adapter would take the owner in the opposite direction however because the equipment will be difficult to use and will provide barely acceptable results. The AM display will not register the actual frequency so that will just add to the fun. For not much more money a radio designed for shortwave reception would be a far better alternative than some add-on adapter than one has to find a place to store that is immediately available for tuning and clarifying. |
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