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![]() "starman" wrote in message ... Frank Dresser wrote: "0ff_r/-\/\\p" wrote in message ... Radios without a digital display are often lacking in other features such as dual conversion to reduce images, good selectivity and tuning stability to prevent drifting. No doubt about it! AND, you will miss the analog display for about 2 seconds. The cheapest portable I would consider for any type of use is the Sony ICF-SW35. Analog dials are dead! In this day and age, why rely on tooth floss to turn a dial? Have you ever used a decent quality analog radio? Most of the analog radios made in the last thirty years have poor tuning mechanisms with stiff plastic dielctric tuning capacitors and no bandspread. I have over a dozen SW radios. I'm an active listener. I have only one digital readout SW radio, a DX-440. It's one of my least used radios. I use it mostly to align the real radios. Frank Dresser If you're referring to the old analog tube radios (boatanchors), they're not a good choice for beginners and certainly not portable, which are the subjects of this post. No, I was just wondering if "off ramp" really knew anything about analog radios. But what can be considered a good radio for a particular person depends, not only on the radio, but what the person listens to and his capabilities. A Zenith Transoceanic is a little less portable than a Sat 800, but it is portable. It might be the best choice for a beginner, provided that beginner listened to the big broadcasters, liked analog tuning and didn't mind so-so image rejection and was capable of dealing with either cobbling up a battery or buying one of those expensive battery kits. I know that only covers a small percentage of beginners, but that small percentage isn't zero, and it's presumptuous to assume that NO beginner would be interested in such a radio. The original poster was asking about the Sangean PT-633. I don't know anything in particular about that radio, but if it's similar to other current analog portables it's probably has poor frequency stability, imprecise frequency readout, poor image rejection but good battery life and a low noise floor. Like any other radio, it has strengths and weaknesses. I have no idea which strengths and weaknesses are most important to the original poster. I own several top end boatanchors but their performance can't match a modern digital communications receiver. Many of the portable digital communications receivers of a few years ago were reported to have lots of birdies, lots of images, were easily overloaded and a high noise floor. I don't know if these qualify as modern or if similar digital communications receivers are still available, but I'd think your radios would out perform those radios. Of course, that depends on the definition of performance. If performance is defined only as frequency stability and exact frequency read out, then the do outperform the analog radios. But someone else may have an entirely different set of performance requirements. Frank Dresser |
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