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In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , David wrote: On Sat, 29 Sep 2007 17:27:54 -0700, "David Eduardo" wrote: I suppose it was my idea to discontinue the R8B? There was not enough market, you fool. I think what happened was that they pretty much sold one to everybody who wanted one over the series' extremely long run. Probably not the case. My guess is the profit margin was to thin and they wanted to spend their time on more profitable product. There are many older technology type components that would continue to get more expensive with time and they would need to redesign it just to keep costs down. I noticed the price on a R8B kept going up the last few years they made it. With the Asian competition and the engineering hours needed probably tipped the scales in favor of dropping it. Drake would probably be asking at $2K to $2.5K for an R8B if they were still making it today. Or, the simple answer: there is a huge decline in the number of SW stations, and also in SW listeners. Domestic SW, the nicest DX, is all but disappearing and the quality broadcasters are reducing schedules or suspending service. Yeah like you would know. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#2
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![]() "Telamon" wrote in message news:telamon_spamshield- it today. Or, the simple answer: there is a huge decline in the number of SW stations, and also in SW listeners. Domestic SW, the nicest DX, is all but disappearing and the quality broadcasters are reducing schedules or suspending service. Yeah like you would know. You are in denial on this, too? How many SW stations did Colombia have in 1967? And how many now? How many total SW hours does the VOA produce today? 1967? How many SW transmitters and what powers and hours did HCJB have in the 60's vs. today? Now do the same statistics for FM. Colombia had zero FMs in '67, now 80% of the listening is to FM, of which there are now more than AMs in the country. There is a migration from SW to Am to FM. And now to digital. |
#3
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In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message news:telamon_spamshield- it today. Or, the simple answer: there is a huge decline in the number of SW stations, and also in SW listeners. Domestic SW, the nicest DX, is all but disappearing and the quality broadcasters are reducing schedules or suspending service. Yeah like you would know. You are in denial on this, too? How many SW stations did Colombia have in 1967? And how many now? How many total SW hours does the VOA produce today? 1967? How many SW transmitters and what powers and hours did HCJB have in the 60's vs. today? Now do the same statistics for FM. Colombia had zero FMs in '67, now 80% of the listening is to FM, of which there are now more than AMs in the country. There is a migration from SW to Am to FM. And now to digital. Some have gone, some have changed, some are new. Things change so what. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
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