Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old November 11th 03, 01:31 AM
Diverd4777
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Alee
Ditto:
Sangean 606A;
GREAT portable for program listening

( one reliable site for buying it in USA below..)

http://www.universal-radio.com/catal...able/3319.html

I have one, and take it Everywhere ( Caribbean, Conneticut, Europe ( twice !!)
)

If you can, try to get a portable antenna (that would be a Plus

- And headphones ( good for keeping battery life long)

- Is he going to be in the Big Cities, or out in the Country?

Buy Ziplock Baggies for keeping things DRY...

And a few extra batteries ( I assume he will have access to AA Size batteries)

and a copy of " Passport to Worldband Radio" ( Book)

Dan


In article ,
(Caribbean Listener) writes:



Never been to Asia, but any small Sangean portable would be able to
pick up the BBC and other strong powerhouses in English. Try the
Sangean 606A. It's a pocket portable that is extremely sensitive which
costs less than $100. I travel to South America a lot and I always
take it with me in my travel pack. Good luck.




  #2   Report Post  
Old November 11th 03, 02:14 AM
Brenda Ann
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Diverd4777" wrote in message
...
Alee
Ditto:
Sangean 606A;
GREAT portable for program listening

( one reliable site for buying it in USA below..)

http://www.universal-radio.com/catal...able/3319.html

I have one, and take it Everywhere ( Caribbean, Conneticut, Europe ( twice

!!)
)

If you can, try to get a portable antenna (that would be a Plus

- And headphones ( good for keeping battery life long)

- Is he going to be in the Big Cities, or out in the Country?

Buy Ziplock Baggies for keeping things DRY...

And a few extra batteries ( I assume he will have access to AA Size

batteries)

and a copy of " Passport to Worldband Radio" ( Book)

Dan


In article ,
(Caribbean Listener) writes:


I've been to Thailand twice (Phuket, via Bangkok), and took my YB400. No
problem receiving BBC and dozens of other English language broadcasts (they
even have the VOA on FM in Phuket!) No shortage of AA batteries there,
either, Thailand is quite progressive commercially (though the way they live
is very old in many cases.. but then, they like it that way.) There are a
large variety of American products available there (though you will find
that sodas taste different, as they use a different sugar for sweetening).

Be prepared for some very friendly people, but watch out for the drivers..
LOL.. they don't even know what side of the road to drive on (well, maybe
they do, if your from Beebland), and don't hold much truck for traffic
laws..



  #3   Report Post  
Old November 11th 03, 06:01 PM
annalee
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Thanks for your replies - I'll pass them on to my brother. Don't know
why I'm being so helpful, he's going to sunny Thailand, while I'm
stuck in rainy England!

Thanks
Alee


"Brenda Ann" wrote in message ...
"Diverd4777" wrote in message
...
Alee
Ditto:
Sangean 606A;
GREAT portable for program listening

( one reliable site for buying it in USA below..)

http://www.universal-radio.com/catal...able/3319.html

I have one, and take it Everywhere ( Caribbean, Conneticut, Europe ( twice

!!)
)

If you can, try to get a portable antenna (that would be a Plus

- And headphones ( good for keeping battery life long)

- Is he going to be in the Big Cities, or out in the Country?

Buy Ziplock Baggies for keeping things DRY...

And a few extra batteries ( I assume he will have access to AA Size

batteries)

and a copy of " Passport to Worldband Radio" ( Book)

Dan


In article ,
(Caribbean Listener) writes:


I've been to Thailand twice (Phuket, via Bangkok), and took my YB400. No
problem receiving BBC and dozens of other English language broadcasts (they
even have the VOA on FM in Phuket!) No shortage of AA batteries there,
either, Thailand is quite progressive commercially (though the way they live
is very old in many cases.. but then, they like it that way.) There are a
large variety of American products available there (though you will find
that sodas taste different, as they use a different sugar for sweetening).

Be prepared for some very friendly people, but watch out for the drivers..
LOL.. they don't even know what side of the road to drive on (well, maybe
they do, if your from Beebland), and don't hold much truck for traffic
laws..

  #4   Report Post  
Old November 12th 03, 02:44 PM
Alex Flinsch
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On wrote:
large variety of American products available there (though you will find
that sodas taste different, as they use a different sugar for sweetening).


OT -- the reason that the sodas taste different is that they actually use
sugar, rather than corn syrup

  #8   Report Post  
Old November 14th 03, 04:13 AM
John
 
Posts: n/a
Default

tommyknocker wrote in message ...

There is an AFRTS relay at Diego Garcia; that will probably be the
stream you hear best. AFRTS feeders are always in SSB but they're on odd
freqs (including some that end in .5 khz) so check to see if the radio
you're considering covers them.


Thanks, looks like Diego Garcia is on Diego Garcia Upper Sideband
12579 kHz (days) and 4319 kHz (nights)--I'm assuming that either the
Sangean ATS-505P or Sony ICF-SW7600GR would get these frequencies.
  #9   Report Post  
Old November 14th 03, 02:18 AM
grumpus
 
Posts: n/a
Default

(John) wrote in message . com...
(Diverd4777) wrote in message ...
Alee
Ditto:
Sangean 606A;
GREAT portable for program listening


I have used this model in Southeast Asia as well with great success
for BBC. But I wonder for my next month long trip coming up soon
about buying a model with single side band capability. Would this
give me reception of AFRTS SW broadcasts? Can those broadcasts be
picked up in Thailand/Cambodia/Vietnam? It looks like the main voice
channel has NPR and lots of interesting programming.


Yes, a portable with SSB capability would allow you to receive AFRTS
broadcasts, assuming those broadcasts are beamed to that area of the
world (check Passport to find out AFRTS coverage). I would suggest
you purchase a model with a clarifying control, one which will permit
you to resolve the signal received exactly. For instance, the RS
DX-398/Sangean 909 does not have a clarifying control. It resolves
SSB signals in 40Hz steps, which although not bad does sound somewhat
unnatural. As your intent is to listen to what amounts to broadcast
programming for hours on end, I think you would become fatigued
listening to the 398/909's slightly distorted SSB audio. The Sony
7600GR on the other hand has this control and SSB signals can be
resolved precisely such that the signals received sound totally
natural. The 7600GR's speaker is a little harsh to listen to, but
this shortcoming can be worked around either through the use of
headphones or by running the audio through a pair of unamplified
walkman or computer speakers. You might also look into the Degen
DE1102/Kaito KA1102, a new model which the 2004 Passport has given
high marks to. For one hundred smackers, this model sounds hard to
beat. As Passport says, nothing "...else under $100 with
single-sideband capability even comes close." This model is smaller
than the Sangean 606A, has a three inch speaker which has better than
average audio for its class, comes with a power adaptor, three
rechargeable batteries which recharge inside the radio, and very
clever, has a backlit display and keypad for nighttime operation. The
Kaito version comes with a 120V adaptor, the Degen with a 220V
adaptor. I'm mighty tempted to purchase one of these myself.

Regards,

Grumpus
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin #687 Tedd Mirgliotta General 15 November 29th 04 03:28 PM
Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin #687 Tedd Mirgliotta Dx 0 November 26th 04 06:58 PM
Ohio/Penn DX Bulletin #687 Tedd Mirgliotta Info 0 November 26th 04 06:58 PM
Gulf of Thailand Blue Shortwave 0 October 2nd 03 02:14 AM
For those that are against the morse removal Derek Policy 75 September 11th 03 06:29 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:32 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017