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Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton's productline
http://www.passband.com/eton-retains-e1-xm-drops-e1
Interestingly, the Passband.com article states that the E1XM is to be retained and the E1 discontinued. Yet, there have been a number of folks on the Yahoo E1XM group who have called Eton enquiring as to this matter and who were told that it was the E1XM that was being discontinued, while the E1 (non-XM variant) was to be retained in the product line. I guess this story will require a bit more time before the facts are entirely sorted out. In any case, the Eton folks really need to get a consistent story out, one way or the other. And they should've ensured that there was a consistent and internally understood position on this prior to CES 2008. As it is, the Eton E1 / E1XM discontinuation bit was presumably spawned from a comment made by an Eton rep at CES 2008. As result, for a wide range of radio enthusiasts in various online fora, the discontinuation story was just as big a news item as the Sat 750 unveilling. And given the apparent feature omissions of the Sat 750 (no sync, no PBT, apparently 2 bandwidth filter selections, as opposed to the three on the E1), the overall Eton story emanating from CES 2008 was one of a retreat from the premium shortwave portable market. Time will tell... junius |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton'sproduct line
On Jan 11, 11:08*pm, junius wrote:
http://www.passband.com/eton-retains-e1-xm-drops-e1 Interestingly, the Passband.com article states that the E1XM is to be retained and the E1 discontinued. *Yet, there have been a number of folks on the Yahoo E1XM group who have called Eton enquiring as to this matter and who were told that it was the E1XM that was being discontinued, while the E1 (non-XM variant) was to be retained in the product line. *I guess this story will require a bit more time before the facts are entirely sorted out. In any case, the Eton folks really need to get a consistent story out, one way or the other. *And they should've ensured that there was a consistent and internally understood position on this prior to CES 2008. *As it is, the Eton E1 / E1XM discontinuation bit was presumably spawned from a comment made by an Eton rep at CES 2008. *As result, for a wide range of radio enthusiasts in various online fora, the discontinuation story was just as big a news item as the Sat 750 unveilling. *And given the apparent feature omissions of the Sat 750 (no sync, no PBT, apparently 2 bandwidth filter selections, as opposed to the three on the E1), the overall Eton story emanating from CES 2008 was one of a retreat from the premium shortwave portable market. Time will tell... junius Good News - Eton E1 XM Radio is still alive . . . for a moment things were looking Sirius ! ~ RHF |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton'sproduct line
On Jan 12, 2:08*am, junius wrote:
http://www.passband.com/eton-retains-e1-xm-drops-e1 Interestingly, the Passband.com article states that the E1XM is to be retained and the E1 discontinued. *Yet, there have been a number of folks on the Yahoo E1XM group who have called Eton enquiring as to this matter and who were told that it was the E1XM that was being discontinued, while the E1 (non-XM variant) was to be retained in the product line. *I guess this story will require a bit more time before the facts are entirely sorted out. In any case, the Eton folks really need to get a consistent story out, one way or the other. *And they should've ensured that there was a consistent and internally understood position on this prior to CES 2008. *As it is, the Eton E1 / E1XM discontinuation bit was presumably spawned from a comment made by an Eton rep at CES 2008. *As result, for a wide range of radio enthusiasts in various online fora, the discontinuation story was just as big a news item as the Sat 750 unveilling. *And given the apparent feature omissions of the Sat 750 (no sync, no PBT, apparently 2 bandwidth filter selections, as opposed to the three on the E1), the overall Eton story emanating from CES 2008 was one of a retreat from the premium shortwave portable market. Time will tell... junius Interesting. There was someone on the yahoo E1 group a while back who was talking about how sales of the E1 and its variants were lagging far behind Eton's sales projections. At the time I thought this sounded pretty ominous, but of course this person was silenced immediately. My guess is that there are many more people interested in owning a radio like the 750 than the E1 and/or E1XM. If I want the sorts of features sported by the E1, I'll buy a tabletop receiver. For a portable, I want something lean and relatively simple. |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton'sproduct line
Dear Steve,
I absolutely agree with you about your desires between a portable and a tabletop. Though there is probably a place for something like the Eton E1, why, if it is a portable, does it have no handle? And why, if it's meant to be a serious (no pun intended) radio, does it have only one external antenna input and a weird one at that? And why such poor quality control after several years of production? It's not for me! Best, Joe On Jan 12, 7:50 am, Steve wrote: Interesting. There was someone on the yahoo E1 group a while back who was talking about how sales of the E1 and its variants were lagging far behind Eton's sales projections. At the time I thought this sounded pretty ominous, but of course this person was silenced immediately. My guess is that there are many more people interested in owning a radio like the 750 than the E1 and/or E1XM. If I want the sorts of features sported by the E1, I'll buy a tabletop receiver. For a portable, I want something lean and relatively simple. |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton'sproduct line
On Jan 12, 8:30*am, Joe Analssandrini
wrote: Dear Steve, I absolutely agree with you about your desires between a portable and a tabletop. Though there is probably a place for something like the Eton E1, why, if it is a portable, does it have no handle? And why, if it's meant to be a serious (no pun intended) radio, does it have only one external antenna input and a weird one at that? And why such poor quality control after several years of production? It's not for me! Best, Joe On Jan 12, 7:50 am, Steve wrote: Interesting. There was someone on the yahoo E1 group a while back who was talking about how sales of the E1 and its variants were lagging far behind Eton's sales projections. At the time I thought this sounded pretty ominous, but of course this person was silenced immediately. My guess is that there are many more people interested in owning a radio like the 750 than the E1 and/or E1XM. If I want the sorts of features sported by the E1, I'll buy a tabletop receiver. For a portable, I want something lean and relatively simple.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - IMHO - If Eton Corp or anyone else were to "Re-Do" the Eton E1 Radio in a more traditional Desk-Top Box like the Drake SW8 : It would sell twice as good ~ RHF http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resources/sw8_front.jpg http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resou...comparison.jpg |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton's productline
RHF wrote:
On Jan 12, 8:30 am, Joe Analssandrini wrote: Dear Steve, I absolutely agree with you about your desires between a portable and a tabletop. Though there is probably a place for something like the Eton E1, why, if it is a portable, does it have no handle? And why, if it's meant to be a serious (no pun intended) radio, does it have only one external antenna input and a weird one at that? And why such poor quality control after several years of production? It's not for me! Best, Joe On Jan 12, 7:50 am, Steve wrote: Interesting. There was someone on the yahoo E1 group a while back who was talking about how sales of the E1 and its variants were lagging far behind Eton's sales projections. At the time I thought this sounded pretty ominous, but of course this person was silenced immediately. My guess is that there are many more people interested in owning a radio like the 750 than the E1 and/or E1XM. If I want the sorts of features sported by the E1, I'll buy a tabletop receiver. For a portable, I want something lean and relatively simple.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - IMHO - If Eton Corp or anyone else were to "Re-Do" the Eton E1 Radio in a more traditional Desk-Top Box like the Drake SW8 : It would sell twice as good ~ RHF http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resources/sw8_front.jpg http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resou...comparison.jpg . Give up! There will be no more new HF hobbyist tabletop receivers. There is no more audience. There is no more market. The world has moved on. |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton'sproductline
David wrote: RHF wrote: On Jan 12, 8:30 am, Joe Analssandrini wrote: Dear Steve, I absolutely agree with you about your desires between a portable and a tabletop. Though there is probably a place for something like the Eton E1, why, if it is a portable, does it have no handle? And why, if it's meant to be a serious (no pun intended) radio, does it have only one external antenna input and a weird one at that? And why such poor quality control after several years of production? It's not for me! Best, Joe On Jan 12, 7:50 am, Steve wrote: Interesting. There was someone on the yahoo E1 group a while back who was talking about how sales of the E1 and its variants were lagging far behind Eton's sales projections. At the time I thought this sounded pretty ominous, but of course this person was silenced immediately. My guess is that there are many more people interested in owning a radio like the 750 than the E1 and/or E1XM. If I want the sorts of features sported by the E1, I'll buy a tabletop receiver. For a portable, I want something lean and relatively simple.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - IMHO - If Eton Corp or anyone else were to "Re-Do" the Eton E1 Radio in a more traditional Desk-Top Box like the Drake SW8 : It would sell twice as good ~ RHF http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resources/sw8_front.jpg http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resou...comparison.jpg . Give up! There will be no more new HF hobbyist tabletop receivers. There is no more audience. There is no more market. The world has moved on. Suggest you move on as well. |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton's product line
In article ,
David wrote: RHF wrote: On Jan 12, 8:30 am, Joe Analssandrini wrote: Dear Steve, I absolutely agree with you about your desires between a portable and a tabletop. Though there is probably a place for something like the Eton E1, why, if it is a portable, does it have no handle? And why, if it's meant to be a serious (no pun intended) radio, does it have only one external antenna input and a weird one at that? And why such poor quality control after several years of production? It's not for me! Best, Joe On Jan 12, 7:50 am, Steve wrote: Interesting. There was someone on the yahoo E1 group a while back who was talking about how sales of the E1 and its variants were lagging far behind Eton's sales projections. At the time I thought this sounded pretty ominous, but of course this person was silenced immediately. My guess is that there are many more people interested in owning a radio like the 750 than the E1 and/or E1XM. If I want the sorts of features sported by the E1, I'll buy a tabletop receiver. For a portable, I want something lean and relatively simple.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - IMHO - If Eton Corp or anyone else were to "Re-Do" the Eton E1 Radio in a more traditional Desk-Top Box like the Drake SW8 : It would sell twice as good ~ RHF http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resources/sw8_front.jpg http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resou...comparison.jpg . Give up! There will be no more new HF hobbyist tabletop receivers. There is no more audience. There is no more market. The world has moved on. Take another hit on the pipe and go to bed. Don't let the door hit you in the fanny on the way out. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton's productline
Telamon wrote:
In article , David wrote: RHF wrote: On Jan 12, 8:30 am, Joe Analssandrini wrote: Dear Steve, I absolutely agree with you about your desires between a portable and a tabletop. Though there is probably a place for something like the Eton E1, why, if it is a portable, does it have no handle? And why, if it's meant to be a serious (no pun intended) radio, does it have only one external antenna input and a weird one at that? And why such poor quality control after several years of production? It's not for me! Best, Joe On Jan 12, 7:50 am, Steve wrote: Interesting. There was someone on the yahoo E1 group a while back who was talking about how sales of the E1 and its variants were lagging far behind Eton's sales projections. At the time I thought this sounded pretty ominous, but of course this person was silenced immediately. My guess is that there are many more people interested in owning a radio like the 750 than the E1 and/or E1XM. If I want the sorts of features sported by the E1, I'll buy a tabletop receiver. For a portable, I want something lean and relatively simple.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - IMHO - If Eton Corp or anyone else were to "Re-Do" the Eton E1 Radio in a more traditional Desk-Top Box like the Drake SW8 : It would sell twice as good ~ RHF http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resources/sw8_front.jpg http://www.mwcircle.org/images/resou...comparison.jpg . Give up! There will be no more new HF hobbyist tabletop receivers. There is no more audience. There is no more market. The world has moved on. Take another hit on the pipe and go to bed. Don't let the door hit you in the fanny on the way out. Door? |
Eton E1 (in some form or another) to be retained in Eton'sproduct line
My guess is that there are many more people interested in owning a
radio like the 750 than the E1 and/or E1XM. If I want the sorts of features sported by the E1, I'll buy a tabletop receiver. For a portable, I want something lean and relatively simple.- Hide quoted text - $300 is quite a bit for a radio that from all appearances seems not to offer any performance-enhancing features beyond what you'd expect from a DE1103, E5/G5 or a Kaito KA2100? Sure, it has the rotatable MW antenna, but what else is it offering besides an alternate means of charging your cellphone (not generally considered a compelling reason to purchase a shortwave rig). As for the tabletop HF receiver market, it's an area that's drying up, as well. It's good that you enjoy your Ten-Tec RX-320D as you do. My guess is that going forward, SWLers wanting a performance upgrade from the under-$150 portables (and who want to purchase new) are going to increasingly be compelled toward considering such computer controlled radio options, as the premium portable and under-$2000 HF tabletop receiver markets continue to dry up. Admittedly, there will be those who will be drawn toward amateur rigs for SWLing. |
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