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What is a GOOD FM Receiver?
I would like to find a receiver that is a great FM receiver. It would
be great if it was stereo, too. I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. Thanks for any help, Dan |
On Tue, 20 Apr 2004 22:09:50 -0500, Dan Graves wrote
(in message ): I would like to find a receiver that is a great FM receiver. It would be great if it was stereo, too. I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. Thanks for any help, Dan If I were interested in buying one /right now/, I'd spend a buncha time looking at and reading about the Kloss Model Two. http://www.tivoliaudio.com/pM2TPE.htm I'd, in all liklihood, invest in a thirty-dollar antenna if I were not using an outside antenna: http://www.ccrane.com/fm_reflect.asp Gray Shockley -------------------------------------------------------- Who uses a CCradio w/a ten dollar Terq (the little square jobbie) I got at OfficeMax |
"Dan Graves" wrote in message ... I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. Dan More receiving power will be obtained mostly through a better antenna. Before you purchase a new receiver, get an outdoor antenna if possible. That will most likely solve your reception problems. Al KA5JGV San Antonio, Tx. |
Dear Mr. Graves,
I find that my Grundig Satellit 800, in addition to all its other features, is a fine and sensitive FM receiver. Stereo through headphones and the line outputs too. (I am not an FM DXer, however. I use it for local FM stations.) I have it connected through my stereo receiver (an NAD 7030) and it picks up FM better than that receiver does. (I get more stations on the Grundig than the NAD and they come in clearer.) I have a TV antenna (mounted in my attic, amplified splitter) hooked to the receiver and just use the whip antenna on the Grundig. As a matter of fact, most of the time while listening to the local classical station (transmitter about 30 miles from my house) I do not even need to extend the whip! If you decide to buy a Grundig, be careful. Have your particular unit tested before purchase to make sure there are no "gremlins" inside. I bought mine from Universal and I would recommend them. (Do NOT buy a Grundig Classic 960. It's a terrible receiver.) Lawrence Dan Graves wrote in message . .. I would like to find a receiver that is a great FM receiver. It would be great if it was stereo, too. I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. Thanks for any help, Dan |
The Tivoli Model One is the best cheapo FM radio out there. Get one
with return privileges, they're Chinese. On Tue, 20 Apr 2004 23:09:50 -0400, Dan Graves wrote: I would like to find a receiver that is a great FM receiver. It would be great if it was stereo, too. I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. Thanks for any help, Dan |
Sangean's 909 does a good job with f.m. reception, and has a convenient tape
output jack so you can run it through your stereo system. Vintage Marantz, Pioneer, Sherwood, & Sony receivers have excellent f.m. sections, also. |
I would agree on the Tivoli Model Two. FM reception had been
problematic for me too, until I got one. (Tall buildings, topography, and nearby high-voltage power lines all conspired against me.) Armed with only its included single-wire antenna, my M2 managed to outperform my separate FM tuners and receivers that cost a _lot_ more than its $160.00 price. (And they were connected to amplified antennae.) The retro-looking analog tuner is a lot of fun, and the little thing sounds really good, too. If you can live without stereo, Tivoli's monaural Model One ($100.00) has a very similar overall sound character, an equally excellent tuner, and requires less space and cash. It might even change your mind about needing stereo. Check out both the Models One and Two at http:/www.tivoliaudio.com. Boston Acoustics' Recepter[tm] radio is mono too, but adds the convenience of digital tuning presets, along with a clock and sleep/alarm functions. For $160.00, it offers most of the convenience features of the Bose Wave, but with better FM reception in my experience, and at a price that is less than half that of the Wave. http:/www.bostonacoustics.com has details. Of these three, I don't think you'd be at all disappointed in any of them. JM Dan Graves wrote in message . .. I would like to find a receiver that is a great FM receiver. It would be great if it was stereo, too. I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. Thanks for any help, Dan |
"Dan Graves" wrote in message
... I would like to find a receiver that is a great FM receiver. It would be great if it was stereo, too. I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. Thanks for any help, Dan First, consider a better antenna... And for radios the term is 'sensitivity' which is the ability to pickup weak signals and there's also 'selectivity'... the ability to pick one signal over another adjacent signal. Important for FM radios as they tend to 'lock' onto a signal to keep up with possible drift. When looking on the web for say, reviews, look for those two terms. But as for radios: I have one of those Grundig crank/battery/wallwart radios that radio shack sells, which does a fine job. I also have an older Ratshack SW radio (DX-440? think it was made by Sangean originally) that is very very good. Where I'm at there are two 'monster' stations, in separate cities in opposite directions about oh.. 70 miles away each, and they are .2mhz apart (xxx.3, xxx.5) Depending on where I'm at, with most radios I hear one or the other, but they splatter over each other's signals. With the Grundig (got it on sale for $25, think book is $40) I can usually get both. With the DX-440 I can choose either almost anywhere. I can even get the station 1 in station 2's city, though it is weak, with an external antenna. If I wanted a nice sensitive FM radio, I'd look for a good Shortwave radio with FM, because even though it's pretty much an entirely separate section of the radio, most medium to high quality sw radio companies are not going to make themselves look bad by tacking on a $1 FM radio. If you have an existing stereo system with a Cassette of FM radio in it, most of the SW radios with FM can put out stereo on a headphone jack, and you can use one of the various 'in car' cd adapter rigs (I have two, one is a 1/4 watt broadcast FM transmitter, the other is a cassette you pop in your cassette player) to get it into your 'real' stereo. But I'd still look at getting an outdoor antenna first, or even a better indoor one. Not one of those amplified pieces of junk. (usually a little pyramid looking thing). Those are about worthless. Now if I could just figure out how to receive 99.9 on an inside antenna in a cinderblock building with 25 computers all running a 100mhz internal bus. (though I can pick out 101.1 with the DX-440... sweet radio, worth every penny of the $3 I gave for it). |
On Tue, 20 Apr 2004 22:31:35 -0500, Gray Shockley
wrote: On Tue, 20 Apr 2004 22:09:50 -0500, Dan Graves wrote (in message ): I would like to find a receiver that is a great FM receiver. It would be great if it was stereo, too. I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. If I were interested in buying one /right now/, I'd spend a buncha time looking at and reading about the Kloss Model Two. http://www.tivoliaudio.com/pM2TPE.htm ...... Gray Shockley I myself am also intersted about good quality FM stereo tuner or receiver sutable for DX-ing. Tivoli model One seems interesting, but it may be sort of overated design brand radio, don't know. But Sangean's WR-1 FM receiver seems interesting too. Claimed to be very sensitive. http://www.sangean.com/product_news.html There is a review in the Radiolabs: http://www.radiolabs.com/Articles/woodradio.html but it is not very convincing :) and in Universal Radio: http://www.universal-radio.com/catal...alty/4394.html Does anybody have personnal experience with these two or can suggest some other model? Tr |
"Dan Graves" wrote in message ... I would like to find a receiver that is a great FM receiver. It would be great if it was stereo, too. I have difficulty picking up some classical stations and need something with more receiving power. Thanks for any help, Dan Dan To get the right answer, you might want to better define 'difficulty'. The nature of your reception problems will lead to getting a response that addresses your specific issue. For example, you problem could be 1) The signal is really weak and little can be heard. 2) There is a strong station on an adjacent frequency interfering with the one I want to listen to. 3) I am hearing two other strong stations on the same frequency I am listening to. 4) The station is too distorted. 5) Something is causing interference to the station. 6) One local station appears at multiple places on the dial and interferes with the one I want to listen to. My preference is a Grundig Sat 800 with an external antenna. It receives distant stations well even though I have many strong local stations. It is also a shortwave receiver. craigm |
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