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#1
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![]() jwilliam wrote: I feel like apologizing right off the bat since I know this question must be asked regularly in this group. I've searched the older posts but still had questions. Well, I'm not the most knowledgeable person in this group, but I may be able to offer some help. I work in CT, about two hours from both NY and Boston. I'm on the lower floor and get mediocre AM/FM reception in my office from my run of the mill boom box on my desk. The mediocre AM/FM respetion is almost certainly due to the fact that you are in a steel frame building - no? That murders radio reception sometimes (most of the time, in fact). I was looking for a replacement radio and in the course of doing a search online found listings for WB radios. The idea of being able to receive not only the CBC news (being an refugee Canadian) but also getting the BBC and other news sources intrigued me. That of course left me with more questions than answers. The BBC would be no problem, if the type of radio you were looking for was in your own home. CBC news is tougher - none of the few Canadian SW outlets are terribly strong. Fine sometimes, weak or almost nonexistent others. And I'm in a wood frame building in Michigan with a longwire antenna hooked to a very sensitive receiver! What I'm looking for is a decent radio I can keep in my office. I don't travel much so it probably won't move from its spot on my desk. I'd like to keep the price below $200 if possible. I'm not sure what I can expect to hear. Might I be able to pull in stations from Europe with a radio in that price range or will I be limited to those that are getting some form of enhanced reception on the eastern US seaboard? With any of the radios you mention below, when reception conditions are good, you can occasionally do all of the things you hope for. But again - in that steel frame building . . . Since I'll be at work I won't be spending much time fiddling with dials to pull in too many really esoteric stations, but getting news directly from the Middle East or Japan on my desktop would be amazing. See above comment. From the research I've done I looked at the Sony 2010 (a used one, although most of the ones on Ebay appear to be pretty old models, very low serial numbers). I also saw good reviews for the Grundig YB 400PE, which I can pick up new for less than the used 2010. Both are good radios in your price range, and might well give you the results you are looking for on a whip antenna *when you are at home*. But in a steel frame building, I doubt it. Remember, others here may have more hopeful info for you - keep checking this thread. And god luck to you, jwilliam. Tony |
#2
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![]() Tony Meloche wrote: jwilliam wrote: I feel like apologizing right off the bat since I know this question must be asked regularly in this group. I've searched the older posts but still had questions. Well, I'm not the most knowledgeable person in this group, but I may be able to offer some help. I work in CT, about two hours from both NY and Boston. I'm on the lower floor and get mediocre AM/FM reception in my office from my run of the mill boom box on my desk. The mediocre AM/FM respetion is almost certainly due to the fact that you are in a steel frame building - no? That murders radio reception sometimes (most of the time, in fact). I was looking for a replacement radio and in the course of doing a search online found listings for WB radios. The idea of being able to receive not only the CBC news (being an refugee Canadian) but also getting the BBC and other news sources intrigued me. That of course left me with more questions than answers. The BBC would be no problem, if the type of radio you were looking for was in your own home. CBC news is tougher - none of the few Canadian SW outlets are terribly strong. Fine sometimes, weak or almost nonexistent others. And I'm in a wood frame building in Michigan with a longwire antenna hooked to a very sensitive receiver! What I'm looking for is a decent radio I can keep in my office. I don't travel much so it probably won't move from its spot on my desk. I'd like to keep the price below $200 if possible. I'm not sure what I can expect to hear. Might I be able to pull in stations from Europe with a radio in that price range or will I be limited to those that are getting some form of enhanced reception on the eastern US seaboard? With any of the radios you mention below, when reception conditions are good, you can occasionally do all of the things you hope for. But again - in that steel frame building . . . Since I'll be at work I won't be spending much time fiddling with dials to pull in too many really esoteric stations, but getting news directly from the Middle East or Japan on my desktop would be amazing. See above comment. From the research I've done I looked at the Sony 2010 (a used one, although most of the ones on Ebay appear to be pretty old models, very low serial numbers). I also saw good reviews for the Grundig YB 400PE, which I can pick up new for less than the used 2010. Both are good radios in your price range, and might well give you the results you are looking for on a whip antenna *when you are at home*. But in a steel frame building, I doubt it. Remember, others here may have more hopeful info for you - keep checking this thread. And god luck to you, jwilliam. Tony Thanks for your reply. Actually, I may have overstated the poor quality of AM/FM reception in my office. I can get WFAN pretty clearly, ESPN comes in faint and with static, which probably speaks more to the relative strength of their signal than to any issues with reception. I've also added the Sony 7600GR to my list of possibilities after reading some more reviews. Jon |
#3
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jwilliam wrote:
Tony Meloche wrote: jwilliam wrote: I feel like apologizing right off the bat since I know this question must be asked regularly in this group. I've searched the older posts but still had questions. Well, I'm not the most knowledgeable person in this group, but I may be able to offer some help. I work in CT, about two hours from both NY and Boston. I'm on the lower floor and get mediocre AM/FM reception in my office from my run of the mill boom box on my desk. The mediocre AM/FM respetion is almost certainly due to the fact that you are in a steel frame building - no? That murders radio reception sometimes (most of the time, in fact). I was looking for a replacement radio and in the course of doing a search online found listings for WB radios. The idea of being able to receive not only the CBC news (being an refugee Canadian) but also getting the BBC and other news sources intrigued me. That of course left me with more questions than answers. The BBC would be no problem, if the type of radio you were looking for was in your own home. CBC news is tougher - none of the few Canadian SW outlets are terribly strong. Fine sometimes, weak or almost nonexistent others. And I'm in a wood frame building in Michigan with a longwire antenna hooked to a very sensitive receiver! What I'm looking for is a decent radio I can keep in my office. I don't travel much so it probably won't move from its spot on my desk. I'd like to keep the price below $200 if possible. I'm not sure what I can expect to hear. Might I be able to pull in stations from Europe with a radio in that price range or will I be limited to those that are getting some form of enhanced reception on the eastern US seaboard? With any of the radios you mention below, when reception conditions are good, you can occasionally do all of the things you hope for. But again - in that steel frame building . . . Since I'll be at work I won't be spending much time fiddling with dials to pull in too many really esoteric stations, but getting news directly from the Middle East or Japan on my desktop would be amazing. See above comment. From the research I've done I looked at the Sony 2010 (a used one, although most of the ones on Ebay appear to be pretty old models, very low serial numbers). I also saw good reviews for the Grundig YB 400PE, which I can pick up new for less than the used 2010. Both are good radios in your price range, and might well give you the results you are looking for on a whip antenna *when you are at home*. But in a steel frame building, I doubt it. Remember, others here may have more hopeful info for you - keep checking this thread. And god luck to you, jwilliam. Tony Thanks for your reply. Actually, I may have overstated the poor quality of AM/FM reception in my office. I can get WFAN pretty clearly, ESPN comes in faint and with static, which probably speaks more to the relative strength of their signal than to any issues with reception. I've also added the Sony 7600GR to my list of possibilities after reading some more reviews. Jon Consider getting the Sony ANLP-1 loop antenna with the 7600GR. Locate the loop on one of the windows in your office. This should give you better reception than the whip antenna on the radio. You could use the loop with other portables too. -----------== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Uncensored Usenet News ==---------- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----= Over 100,000 Newsgroups - Unlimited Fast Downloads - 19 Servers =----- |
#4
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Have you thought about a Lowe HF-150? A classic contemporary
AM/shortwave radio constructed in a highly engineered but understated British way. No longer on sale but available on eBay. If you want big audio add on the link AP-150 audio unit. Donal |
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