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Old February 11th 07, 04:35 PM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jul 2006
Posts: 42
Default Newbie looking for a radio

I forgot:

Secondary features should also be considered:


Having a tuning knob also belongs into this category. If you only listen
to a small number of stations with known frequencies, then a set with
up/down key tuning will be sufficient provided it has direct frequency
entry or at least a sufficient number of presets. However, if you're the
bandscanning type, something with a tuning knob will be significantly to
infinitely more comfortable to operate. The worst example of a key-tuned
set that I have is the old Sony ICF-SW30 - on SW it tunes in 1 kHz steps
only, at a fairly leisurely pace and with muting each time at that
(which contributes an annoying clicking), there is no direct frequency
entry and you have a total of 5 presets for all the SW bands. This can
only be called frustrating, particularly since reception performance is
good for an entry-level set. I grew up with an ICF-SW7600G, which is OK,
but still doesn't make the best bandscanning rig (except for ham bands).

Stephan
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Old February 12th 07, 10:11 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Sep 2006
Posts: 39
Default Newbie looking for a radio

Stephan Grossklass a écrit :
I forgot:

Secondary features should also be considered:


Having a tuning knob also belongs into this category. If you only listen
to a small number of stations with known frequencies, then a set with
up/down key tuning will be sufficient provided it has direct frequency
entry or at least a sufficient number of presets. However, if you're the
bandscanning type, something with a tuning knob will be significantly to
infinitely more comfortable to operate. The worst example of a key-tuned
set that I have is the old Sony ICF-SW30 - on SW it tunes in 1 kHz steps
only, at a fairly leisurely pace and with muting each time at that
(which contributes an annoying clicking), there is no direct frequency
entry and you have a total of 5 presets for all the SW bands. This can
only be called frustrating, particularly since reception performance is
good for an entry-level set. I grew up with an ICF-SW7600G, which is OK,
but still doesn't make the best bandscanning rig (except for ham bands).

Stephan


Hello all,

I don't know wether the 7600GR has the same feature than the SW100 :
when holding down the 1kHz + or - button, the radio scans up or down the
frequencies providing the sound and without muting, at a correct speed,
so it acts more or less like a tuning knob. I found this quite
compfortable sometime (more than the automatic scanning).

Charly
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