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![]() "D Peter Maus" wrote in message ... Michael Lawson wrote: "D Peter Maus" wrote in message news ![]() Michael Lawson wrote: "m II" wrote in message news:hC%De.148005$tt5.90754@edtnps90... m II wrote: mike maghakian wrote: I have owned both several times and currently own the 800. the price of a later edition 8, which is the ONLY only one that a person should use is too high. almost double the cost of a good tested 800 I've been wondering about the manufacturing dates on the 800. How can I tell when a set was made? In what order were the fixes made during manufacture? If I see a set, how can I tell if it's the latest version, so I don't get stuck with garbage quality control? Thanks for the information. I'll look elsewhere for the help. RHF provided this a long time ago to the Yahoo Sat 800 group: "The SN is # 8010008400" Serial Number Decoder: 8YMM****** Y = "0" = 2000 MM = "10" = October NOTE: The so-called Third Generation Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium Radios with all the "Fixes" built into them started to be built in the First Quarter Jan-Feb-Mar 2001. --Mike L. The so called Third Generation Sat 800 is a term that was started by our favorite e-Bay scamster. It was so effective a marketing tool that it was picked up by Lextronix/Eton and used in their promotional materials. Its use was also strongly encouraged when setting up the numerous Grundig drop-ship "retailers" on e-Bay and other other outlets. But the term is entirely fictional. It has no meaning. There is only ONE change in the Sat 800 over its entire production cycle: ball bearings on the tuning shaft. No other changes were made throughout the life cycle of the product. This according to an insider from Lextronix, now Eton, and reported here, numerous times. Though QC appeared to have improved in successive production runs, the rate of failure was still high enough in later runs to require a significant percentage of refurbishment at Drake. A general rule of thumb was (and still is) to buy the Sat 800 from a reputable dealer, such as Universal. We used to argue about this back when the Sat 800 was released, Peter. It always seemed that the Sat 800's sold by Universal seemed to work fine, but the Sat 800's sold by places like The Sharper Image seemed to have a high failure rate. If you're really determined to go with this radio, find one that has been through the Drake repair center. History and user comments in these fora strongly suggest that there is no guarantee of a quality unit simply by selecting from 'desirable' serial numbers. All of the 'fixes'--- all ONE of them--- are found in any unit with a ball bearing tuning shaft. That's rather odd. When I spoke to the Drake people when I went to pick up my Sat 800 after a tuneup, they said that they made several changes authorized by Eton as part of bringing my Sat 800 (one of the first ones sold) up to the current model. I didn't press them on it, but several usually means more than one, and I don't think they meant the couple of caps that were bad and needed replacing, either. Also, I do know that Lextronics did replace the original power supply after a lot of people complained about the RF in them; I did complain, and received a different power supply model free of charge. --Mike L. I remember the arguments. Yes, Universal sold rigs seemed to have fewer difficulties. Universal's own people admitted that they had opened and tested/verified each unit sold. While the distributor, Lextronix, seemed to have trouble keeping Universal supplied, while SA, Heartland, Damark and other discount outlets seemed to be blowing them into the streets at will. Honestly, I believe I said then (and I still believe it) that Grove, Universal and Co. wouldn't have sold the Sat 800 if it was a real turkey, and Lextronix knew this. Therefore, Lextronix made certain that the shipments that went there were better than to other places. Why?? Who shops at Universal?? The people who are into the hobby, not the casual guy who's just dabbling. To that latter guy, The Sharper Image is a place to blow a wad of dough with the impression that you're getting a quality product, when the reality is that it's just a fancier way of saying "I don't know what I'm doing, but I'm making too much money to concern myself with knowing what I bought." There is a lot about this radio that has never been adequately explained by Lextronix. Why Universal, Grove and other reputable radio dealers had trouble getting their hands on them, while SA had so many of them in store rooms that they discontinued accepting shipments, is only one. Others include the more than deceptive marketing, which included direct mail pieces claiming that the radio was actually designed by Grundig engineers, when it wasn't (Grundig not only had no part in this radio, they actually refused to acknowledge it. And one Grundig engineer who regularly participated on one of the Grundig/Satellit discussion groups of which I was a member actually called it an embarrassment to the name.) One direct mail piece I received claimed that Sat 800, was in fact, a German radio. I sent that one back to Lextronix with a big red circle around that claim and instructed them to remove my name from all mailing lists. (Which, to my surprise, they actually did.) But there were no corrections in promotional literature. Why information about this radio has been so jealously guarded, that schematics and service manuals have not been available from official sources (unlike any other Grundig product for which service manuals, parts and service information have been readily available), is another question that's never been answered. Break an antenna, get a replacement? Try that one sometime. To be honest, I've never owned a Grundig/Lextronix other than this one, so I have no point to compare with other Grundigs. As for the other items, I will concede all points. I suspect it comes more from a jealous guarding of company secrets (this is Lextronix, not Grundig, so the viewpoint is different) than from a screw thy neighbor approach. Why Radio Nederland was never able to get a factory sample for evaluation afer being promised publicly that they would (remember Sundstrom had to purchase not one, but two, at retail from SA to finally get a review written), and yet, Larry (endorse-it-before-the-prototype-has-been-produced) Magne got not one, but three of them at a time from the factory, all hand tweaked, for not one, not two, but THREE evaluations, for a total of NINE receivers. From the factory. But no other reviewer was countenanced by Lextronix on this product. I do not think it an accident that they got it to Magne the way they did. If they were putting Passports into some of the boxes for shipments, it would behoove Lextronix to have a review of the Sat 800 in the best possible light in the Passport inside the box. Dishonest?? No. Trying to maximize exposure?? Yes. Doing it in a less than aboveboard manner?? Yes. As for Radio Nederland, that doesn't surprise me much. The Sat 800 was designed for the American market, and the marketing geniuses at Lextronix probably figured that it wasn't a high priority to get a sample out to a "foreign" reviewer. Last I checked, though, Tom was still located in the U.S. I've seen how marketers think, and getting a lot of them to think outside of the narrow viewpoint that they have and accept a wider scope is an exercise in deprogramming. And there are more questions. But these alone paint a picture of a product that's more mystery than substance under the hood. Why, in fact, has so much been made about Drake's involvement in SAT 800, but nowhere does the name of Drake appear in any of the direct mail pieces, or advertising. And no one, even inside Drake, can actually explain what Drake's involvement was. One person here, reported a conversation with a Drake employee who said that Drake's involvement was in the design and licensing of the sync detector, and no more. Another post here detailed a conversation with a Drake technician who said that the total involvement was a couple of conversations about the IF strip of SW-8. But definitive information is still missing. That's not true of any other product mentioned here. When I spoke to the service manager at Drake, he told me that eton/Lextronix had bought the Drake design for the SW8, and tweaked it themselves for use in the Sat 800. A nice little side effect of this is that you get to put your name on the box, and don't have to reference Drake's name. Hell, anyone can call someone at ICOM and get detailed information, even parts, even full documentation on their products, at will. But this radio, produced under so many deceptions, remains a mystery. With only marketing department smoke and mirrors consistently available to the public. Rarely has so much passion been on display about a product that so few people know so little about, with such a history of substandard quality. Like I said then, I can say that I know I didn't get a turkey. That doesn't invalidate all those other people who did, but that also doesn't mean that the people (like me) who didn't aren't idiots, either. I honestly have not kept track of the quality of the runs after I dropped out of the hobby for a couple of years in the early 2000's, so I also can't say if Lextronix has ever solved their production issues. All I can say is that it is a good portatop if you get a good production model. At the time, if you couldn't plunk down the kilobuck for a good tabletop, the Sat 800 was a decent alternative. I know that the Sat 800 isn't the Second Coming, and I know that the Sat 800 has had a checkered past mainly based on the fact that to keep costs down they rolled the dice and went overseas to China for production. Yes, I remember the arguments. I remember them well. Amused by them, in fact. Because they were SO fierce, in wake of the overwhelmingly deceptive marketing of this product. They remind me of the arguments we had in a World Religion class I recently took. A lot of fierce passion and faith. And a whole lot of ignoring any perspective other than our own. Ha. That's like telling people on r.r.s. to stop responding to political postings. At least it was on topic back then. As someone said at the beginning, it's real clear that Marketing is driving this train. That the company that claims to have produced this radio has neither an engineering department, nor a manufacturing facility, and has so obscured the lineage of the product that the only thing that users are really buying for their $500 or so, is the advertising. This is what a lot of companies want to evolve into: a marketing and "core business" company. Sell off assets that aren't part of the "core business" (whatever the hell that means) and concentrate on what you do best. Thing is, when you sell off things like factories, you're at the mercy of a contractor to provide the quality people have come to expect from you. Think of the upsides to this that IBM is pitching to their customers: let us handle your HR or your IT or your payroll or your accounting, and you can go and do the "big things". The problem is, IBM has a different set of goals to make a profit, and that may or may not intersect with your own. Unfortunately, I see more of this in the future, rather than less. Now specifically: the external power supply change is not a production change. The external power supply is not really part of the radio, as much as it's an accessory. They changed to a different model/vendor for the external power supply. And it was made available to any purchaser. That's not a production change to the radio. Technically, you are right, but it was a change to the end packaging. And that was done within several months of the initial release of the Sat 800, which means that it was done because they sucked and the consumers let them know about it. There have been reported that some of the Drake refurbished models were modified to be different than production models, with changes made by Drake in the shop. Some Drake technicians have supported this claim. Specifics seem always to be lacking when pressed as to what those changes actually are. Always 'to bring them up to current production' is the claim. But that's something you hear about ANY product in for refurbishment. It's standard Marketing Mantra 1-1A. A appeasement. But at Lextronix, insiders are admitting that there have been no changes to production, with the single exception of the bearings on the tuning shaft. Now, Drake technicians would be able to make modifications to SAT 800 models in for refurbishment, in the same way that they were able to make modifications to their own radios. After all, SAT 800 is reputed to be a clone of SW-8. This after Drake engineers and technicians have publicly said that many of the parts that went into SW-8 were out of production and no longer available, btw. Truth is, that the only thing that made SW-8 unique was the IF strip, and of that, only the sync detector. So, while parts for SW-8 may no longer be available, Tecsun, the actual manufacturer of SAT 800, being experienced in radio design and manufacture, can easily create their own circuits using parts of their own selection and tie them into a Drake inspired, if not designed, IF strip, using a Drake designed sync. Drake's involvement could be slight, at best. Even peripheral. So it makes sense that Drake techs would be able to execute mods on incoming SAT 800 models, cleaning up production errors, and making improvements, all under the heading of 'refurbishment,' and 'bringing performance up to current production.' As I mentioned above, I was told that Lextronix bought the design and then tweaked it. The extent of the tweaking was something I didn't follow up on, but he did mention that he knew that the audio was tweaked a bit. Absent specifics, these terms are also meaningless. And specifics, as always with this radio, are lacking. And yet, a few consistencies remain, one of which, by the admission of Lextronix' own people as reported in this group by more than one who have had contact with persons on the inside at Lex, the only change was the tuning shaft bearings, and another, that the so called 'Third Generation' was a marketing appellation that came from a e-Bay vendor. Ugh. I should have probably mentioned that my reference above was a quote from RHF. I'm gonna have my head dragged in the mud for that for a while, I suppose. In this light, arguments about SAT 800 fall, again, into the same class as the arguments this week over Bush, elections, Iraq and religion: A lot of passion and faith, while ignoring any position that's not our own. You'd think, for the kind of money that's being spent here, there would be more critical thinking. And that the vacuum created by questions unanswered would not be so readily filled with marketing slogans and 'handling' remarks. You'd think. Ha. I'm older and wiser than when I was back then, and I know that a good slogan and damage control can hide many defects and deflect energy away from what really matters. As does enough yelling and screaming. Unfortunately. --Mike L. |
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