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![]() "Ruffin Bailey" wrote in message I'm looking for the best, relatively inexpensive ($150) home radio for listening to talk radio with the following considertaions/constraints... Forget about the Model One, SuperRadio and CCRane. I have the Boston Acoustics Recepter, SuperRadioII and Sony 7600GR. I sold sold my CCrane after using the Recepter. The SuperRadioII sits in my garage. The FM and AM sensitivity of the Recepter is superb. This radio has been a sleeper in my opinion. I usually judge a company's products by the advertisement factor. The more Ad's the more the company is "trying" to sell inventory. That in and of itself is telling you loads about a products desireability. The Boston Acoustics Recepter has a 75ohm F-connector for coax that can be used for an external FM antenna. Or simply use the supplied FM pigtail antenna that comes supplied in the box. It also has external AM antenna connections which when used will disconnect the internal AM ferrite bar antenna. This is desireable since when hooking up a loop antenna (I use the Terk Advantage) you will not have any interaction. Using the Terk Advantage loop antenna I am able to hear Carribean AM stations here in the upper Midwest. Also, anything my Sony 7600GR can hear so can my Recepter on its internal ferrite bar antenna. Using an external loop will allow you to null stations very effectively. However, the Sony is better able to handle fading better while locked on in sync mode. The Recepter's internal AM ferrite bar antenna is no slouch. It works very well on its own. The only thing I don't like about the Recepter is its wide bandwidth filter on the AM band. If there is a 50KW flamethrower adjacent to your desired station, monkeychatter will be a problem. I suppose this is intentional as the Recepter was designed for quality audio response which a narrower filter would not provide. Needless to say, the sound quality on the Recepter is second to none. It wins this contest hands down - NO Contest! By the way, Mr Tivoli used to work with Boston Acoustics many years ago. The Recepter is available from Best Buy which has a generous return policy. Take one home and give the dial a spin. You won't regret it! 1.) I like to listen to a somewhat difficult to receive FM station day & night which my home cheapie radios don't pick up well (though the cars do very well). It would appear for FM you can't do better than a Model One (http://www.tivoliaudio.com/product.p...139&cat=&page=) (one such review: http://wkhr.org/articles.htm). The Boston Acoustics Recepter is reported to perform as well as the Model One (CNET says better -- http://reviews.cnet.com/Boston_Acous...866_7-30606594 -2.html?tag=top), though it's a bit more expensive. 2.) There's a local, fairly low-power (harder to hear at night than day) AM sports station I like to listen to. In two of our cars I get decent daytime reception. Nighttime reception is spotty at best. Cheapie home radios don't pick up the station well at all. It would appear the CC Radio (http://www.ccrane.com/ccradio-plus-am-fm-radio.aspx) comes highly recommended by many, though just as many seem to say the much less expensive GE Superadio III (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg...1091470319/sr= 1-1/ref=sr_1_1_etk-electronics/102-7474735-2432946?v=glance&s=electronics&n= 172282) does as well if not better. This is apparently due to the longer AM antannae in these radios. The Model One seems to have fairly pedestrian AM reception (http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=e...364344%40news5. bellatlantic.net&rnum=3&prev=/groups%3Fq%3D%2522superadio%2522%2520%2522mode l%2520one%2522%2520am%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26sa%3DN%2 6tab%3Dwg). 3.) I like to catch NBA & MLB games (and the few late NFL games) on AM late at night, no matter the station. I'm in the Carolinas, and can catch 1120 from St. Louis, 880 from NYC, and 1000 from Cleveland (iirc) in one car with varying results. The reception is pretty noisy and usually goes in and out. But, depending on weather, I can usually find something worth listening to in the car. Not so with any other vehicles or home radios (though, strangely, my Sony Walkman picks up AM fairly well, but perhaps only b/c it's so easy to move around for better pickup). Again, I suppose the CCRadio or, more likely, the Superadio would be the better choice out of the box. 4.) The Model One looks kewl. 5.) I want a fixed-location, indoor radio, so adding antannae isn't an issue and battery power isn't a big plus. Any specific recommendations/remarks would be appreciated, but I do have one pointed question -- it appears a good, external AM antennae like those at C. Crane (http://www.ccrane.com/am-antenna.aspx) or perhaps even the kits sold here (http://www.mtmscientific.com/loop.html or http://www.geocities.com/SunsetStrip/Underground/8585/) turn most any AM radio into a pretty high-class receiver. Is that true? Would something like the C Crane antennae or even a Radio Shack loop turn a Model One into a great AM box? If so, why the upset over, eg, the Model One's AM reception like the thread quoted at the end of 2.), above? Is there anything about my desire for AM reception as described in 2 & 3 that would override my irrational desire for 4, were I willing to shell out for an AM antennae? Thanks! Ruffin Bailey |
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