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![]() starman wrote: Laura M wrote: Hi all - I'm thinking of purchasing the Sony ICF-SW7600 as my first shortwave radio. I've been reading some comments in the newsgroup that lead me to believe this might be a good radio to start with, to see if I enjoy SW. I'm curious about the whip antenna. Will this be sufficient to receive quality AM station reception at night? If not, is there an antenna I can purchase that is small and is easily set up and put away? The SW radio will be in our guest room and I need something easily removed when company comes over. Any info would be so helpful and appreciated! Laura Hi Laura: As another poster pointed out, the whip antenna likely has nothing to do with the AM (540 - 1700) reception. That is the function of the internal ferrite bar antenna. I have no personal experience with that radio. But I can tell you that Sony builds a better AM receiver/antenna section into their radios than a lot of other manufacturers. Late in the evening - especially in the wintertime - you may be astonished by the stations you can recieve (not that a better MW receiver and antenna couldn't do better, of course). How to improve your odds? If you are in a wood frame home - good! If you can listen from the second, or even better third floor (if your home is built as such) better yet! If you live out in the country - still better! Few people have all these things going for them, but you get the idea. Another thing you might want to consider is a device called "Select-A-Tenna" (look it up with Google - lots of places sell it). It is about $50.00. It is totally passive: No wires, no AC plug-in, no batteries. You set it near your radio (at a right angle to the top of your radio, using a ferrite bar) and "tune" it to the appoximate frequency you are listening to. It is a minor - but notable - help at night, but it is a godsend in the daytime. Daytime use of the Select-A-Tenna can give amazing results. Another very cheap (couple of bucks) investment is a plastic Lazy Susan big enough to put your radio on. This allows you to rotate your radio smoothly over fractions of an arc - to find the best sweet spot for the station you are trying to pull in. With a ferrite bar, you will not have to rotate the radio more than 90 degrees either way. With a ferrite bar antenna, rotating the radio 180 degrees brings you abck to where you started - get the picture? I also strongly recommend a FREE program called "Radio Listeners Data Base" which is available at this URL. It's the first item listed: http://www.fineware-swl.com/ This is primarily for SW, but also has the WHAM logs, a fairly complete database for MW (AM) listening, too. A great help - just remember it isn't always right, either. Hope this was some help. Best, Tony ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
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