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- From: jlloyd@pluto.cs.clemson.edu (John LLoyd)
- Newsgroups: rec.radio.info
- Followup-To: rec.radio.shortwave
- Subject: SW Radio Reviews
- Date: 5 Jul 1994 16:09:58 GMT
- Organization: Clemson University
- Lines: 1229
- Approved: rec-radio-info@ve6mgs.ampr.ab.ca
-
- Below is a collection of SW receiver reviews written by readers of
- Rec.radio.shortwave. The number following the brand and model number
- is the number of readers, who indicated they use this type of receiver.
-
- All credit for these reviews should be given to the readers of this
- group and not me.
-
- John Lloyd
-
- Radios Reviewed:
-
- AR3000
- DAK DMR-3000
- Emerson PSW-4010
- Grundig Satellit 500
- Grundig Satellit 700
- Icom IC-R70
- Icom R-71A
- Japan Radio Company NRD-515
- Japan Radio Company NRD-525
- Kenwood TS-450
- Lowe HF-150
- Lowe HF-225
- Magnavox 3625
- Magnavox AE-3805
- Panasonic RFB-65L
- Philips AE3905
- Realistic DX-342
- Realistic DX-375
- Realistic DX-380
- Realistic DX-390
- Realistic DX-440
- Sangean ATS-803A
- Sony 2010
- Sony ICF-5100
- Sony ICF-5900W
- Sony ICF-7601
- Sony ICF-SW20
- Sony ICF-SW33
- Sony SW-1
- Sony SW-15
- Sony SW-55
- WATKINS-JOHNSON HF-1000
-
- *****************************************************************
-
- Sony 2010 - 3
-
- I found it VERY easy to plug in and start listening. The supplied
- instructions are adequate for what they do, but are not really
- enough to really start enjoying the radio. The whip antenna works
- great at home, but just doesn't cut it at work (way too much
- metal/interference). Even the supplied wire antenna does not seem
- to help at work (I have not yet tried it at home (no real need).
-
- *****************************************************************
- Realistic DX-342 - 1
-
- I've owned this little radio for about a year now and am really
- pretty happy with it.
-
- Advantages: Size - Measuring approximately 4 3/4 x 2 5/8 x 1,
- you can take this little mini anywhere! Even slip it into your shirt
- pocket!
- SW bands - Covers 9 SW bands: 49m, 41m, 31m, 25m, 21m, 19m and 16m.
- MW, FM, FM Stereo (thru headphones)
- Travel Power lock
- Push button control
- Runs on two AA batteries or AC adapter
- Travel pouch
- Carrying strap
-
- Disadvantages: It's an analog unit, guys and gals, no digital display.
- No back stand
- Antenna does not rotate up
-
- I've had a lot of fun with this little receiver. The SW sensitivity
- is quite good for my area of the country, Cleveland, Ohio. The
- speaker has a nice sound and improves thru the earphones. FM stereo
- thru headphones is great! MW DXing is surprisingly good! I can
- grab signals from Boston, Chicago, New York and Cincinnati much better
- than on my Magnavox AE 3625 Digital!
-
- Summary: A nice little travel radio that's fun to fiddle with or
- take for travel when you're in a pinch. Radio Shack has discontinued
- this model so you might be able to find it on sale for around $50.00.
- I love the size! Ideal for travel! I'm beginning to think that
- anything larger is too cumbersome. I do miss the Digital Display and
- all the features that go with it: Freq. display, Alarms, world time
- display, etc. If I were buying today, though, I'd consider what else
- is out there for just a bit more money. For example, the new
- Sangean 606 is only slightly larger and has all the digital features
- mentioned above that I miss. I 've seen it priced for as little as
- $179.95!
-
- *****************************************************************
- Realistic DX-375 - 1
-
- It costs $99.99 though I got it for $89 since I had a coupon for a
- rebate. For the price I think I got a good deal. It has digital tuning
- and direct input of frequencies which allows tuning to be a pretty
- simple job and not a time consuming act of patience. It uses two C type
- batteries... I use rechargable ones and they last a pretty long time..
-
- It is not small enough to carry in your shirt pocket but it could fit in
- the front or side pocket of an average sized backpack. It is just great
- when you are walking back home from school/work ... it can be easily
- carried in one hand as you catch up on the news from
- BBC/Deutschewelle/Radio Australia/etc.... as you walk home..
- I get decent reception of all the `big stations' even indoors and have,
- on occasion also been able to tune to Radio UAE....
-
- The sleep function is perfect for someone like me who likes to fall asleep
- with music... the FM sound is pretty good in stereo (headphones)... The
- AM reception is also fairly good but it has a very high tendency to catch
- those Bible bashing stations...probably a reflection of the region where
- I live...
-
- The strap is a little shoddy and I have a feeling I may have to `fix it'
- soon... I expect it to pop out any moment....
- Despite that, I like it...
-
- *****************************************************************
- Realistic DX-380 -2
-
- I've owned a DX-380 for about 9 months now and....
- It's a GREAT RADIO! However, I should qualify
- this. I bought it on sale from Radio Shack for the
- bargain price of $129.95! It regularly retails for
- $179.95. At $130.00, this radio is a real steal!
-
- About the size of a large paperback book, the 380
- is feature packed!
-
- *DUAL CLOCKS
- *ALARM WITH RADIO/BUZZER
- *60 MINUTE SLEEP TIMER
- *DUAL BANDWIDTHS
- *DIRECT FREQ. ENTRY TUNING
- *TUNING KNOB
- *SLEW TUNING
- *TUNES IN 1 OR 5 KHZ STEPS
- *CLOCK DISPLAYED SEPARATELY
- *BACKSTAND
- *STEREO THRU HEADPHONES
- *CONTINUOUS SW COVERAGE...NO GAPS!
- *AUTO SCAN UP OR DOWN
- *ANTENNA ROTATES AND SWIVELS
- *CARRYING CASE
-
- The sensitivity of this radio is GREAT! With a reel antenna, it's even
- better! I read another review that said reception was lousy....I think
- that individual should check his particular receiver as he might have
- the rare defective unit. MW reception is also outstanding and with a
- Slect-A-Tenna is greatly improved! Herein Cleveland, I pick up
- Chicago, Cincinnati, and Pittsburgh during the day WITHOUT the
- select-a-tenna! With the S-A-T reception gets an added boost!
- (these are all 50,000 watt stations)
-
- I have found it to be about the perfect travel size. I would like
- something smaller, like the 606. This size, however is fine. I've
- carried hardbound books on jets that are larger. The many features
- makes up for it's slightly larger size over a mini. It does not have
- SSB, but I really don't miss it.
-
- All in all, A great radio priced at $130.00! I would not have bought
- it for the price of $179.95. There are other radios in that price
- range that ive ya more bang for the buck. At $130.00, it's a great
- deal! If you can get it at that price, snap it up!
-
- I am by no means an expert, but I have a DX-380 and can give some
- of my experiences. First of all, I would pay the extra to get the
- 390 to get the single side band capability. I miss it. I miss
- it. Also, the sensitivity for foreign broadcasts (I'm in DC)
- without an external antenna is poor. You get the BBC and some
- German broadcast relays from Canada transmitters, some south
- american stuff, and that's it. BUT with a 50 m Cu wire out my
- 2nd story window attached to the antenna with an alligator clip,
- I regularly get Abu Dhabi and Australia at night.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Realistic DX-390 - 2
-
- Great mid-sized digital portable. Good sensitivity and selectivity.
- Digital display shows time, frequency, signal strength, and memory
- location. Covers LW (in 9 kHz steps), MW (in 9 or 10 kHz steps)
- and SW continuously from 150 kHz to 30000 kHz. FM reception
- (88-108 MHz) with stereo through headphone jack. BFO control for
- SSB reception. Built-in timer/clock, 9 programmable memory
- locations per band, except 18 on SW. Good audio output. RF Gain
- and AM bandwidth controls. Keypad frequency entry. External
- antenna, AC-adapter inputs.
-
- A great radio for the beginner or as an upgrade from a smaller
- and/or analog unit.
-
- Purchased from Radio Shack for $219 in January, 1992.
-
- I have a new Realistic DX-390 (alias Sangean 813??). Seems to be
- a great value for the price $169 US. I haven't yet heard from
- someone who can recommend a radio for the same price that is
- better, and can back it up with facts.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Grundig Satellit 700 - 3
-
- Truly a world-class portable, digital receiver. Excellent
- sensitivity and selectivity. Digital display with two separate
- clock/timers, signal strength meter, band selection, frequency
- readout, and user-definable eight-character "name" for each
- memorized station. Has RDS circuitry on FM to decode the newly-
- phased-in system for identifying stations by call letters,
- format, etc. 512 memory positions, upgradable to 2048. Tunes in
- .1 kHz increments. Selectable wide/narrow bandwidth for AM mode
- reception. Tunes MW in 9 or 10 kHz steps. Keypad frequency entry.
- Receives USB and LSB. Synchonous detector helps pick difficult-
- to-receive stations out of the crowd. Selectable
- automatic/manual gain control. Covers LW (150-353 kHz), MW
- (528-1611 kHz), SW (1612-30000 kHz), and FM (87.5-108 MHz).
- Excellent audio output, with separate treble and bass controls.
- Stereo through headphones or external speakers. Line-level out
- (left and right), external antenna, and 12 VDC-in jacks.
- Local/DX switch. Built extremely rugged. Multi-national power
- supply included.
-
- An outstanding performer, and worth the price to a serious SWL
- or DX'er who requires portability.
-
- Purchased from Universal Radio for $479 in April, 1993.
-
- The Following is a comparison of the SONY ICF-SW77 and the
- GRUNDIG SATELLIT 700:
-
- Both of the receivers you are looking at are pretty solid. The Sony
- is slightly smaller and has a somewhat more "finished" feel about
- it. The Grundig is SOLID with a much better sound. Neither is as
- good a SW signal receiver as the previous Sony, the '2010 (2001).
- However, they both have very advanced features; multiple (and in
- the Grundigs case, expandable) memories with alphanumeric tags
- so that you have a name as well as a frequency, all sorts of
- memory grouping and scanning etc. The Grundig has good RDS ident.
- on it's FM band, but I have a feeling that this isn't used much,
- if at all, in the US. If you intend to buy second-hand, be very
- wary of the SW77 - the early version was pretty flakey. The later
- version is better but still not as good as the '2010.
- I think that the choice comes down to "feel". They are both quite
- complex to use, but both work as advertised. Try 'em both as they
- have quite distinct operational methods. If sheer performance on
- SW is the main point for you, compare them with the Sony ICF2010.
- You'll buy it and save some loot !
- For what it's worth, I tried them both and settled on the
- Grundig. I have my Satellit 700 in daily use and it's performed
- without a hitch.
-
- My reasons for the choice were:
-
- 1. Performance. The Grudig was much better than the early SW77.
- 2. Sound. I happen to prefer the slightly bassy Grundig sound to
- the somewhat sharper Sony.
- 3. Power. The Grundig takes D cells and can self-charge Nicads in
- the set, which is how I have it set up. (The SW77 used C cells)
- They both run down batteries fast. The Sony worse than the
- Grundig due to it's smaller cells.
- 4. RDS. I love it and the SW77 doesn't have it.
- 5. Feel. I like the, I don't know, Germanic solidity and sheer
- heft of the Satellit. A Satellit with a full load of 4AH Nicads
- can tip the scales at twice the weight of a SW77. Of course, if
- drop one on your foot the Sony would be the better bet ! I
- only use the Grudig about the house. I have a '2010 for the
- road.
-
- I hope this splurge hasn't clouded the issue for you.
-
- Editor's Note:
- I have one of these radios and love it! I sent the following
- message to someone just after I bought it.
-
- I just recently forked out $500 and bought a Grundig Satalit 700.
- The sound from the radio is truely impressive! I have always
- wondered why broadcasters put music on shortwave, because it
- alway sounded like garbage. However with the 700 I can listen and
- enjoy the music. The 700 has Bass and Treble controls, which
- improve the sound quality but the Automatic Gain Control most
- likely does the most toward improving the sound (I'm not an
- expert, so this is just a guess!). Anyway my Wife regularly listens
- to music coming from a 60m band radio station in Guatemala, and can
- enjoy the sound. However there are some bad points. It is
- programable, but I have not worked out how to do it yet. Well
- I tried once and gave up. This is not too bad though, because
- BBC, Deutche Welle, and about 10 others are stored in a ROM table.
- And these frequences actual work (i.e. they are the frequencies for
- North America and NOT Germany).
- Also I connected a long wire antenna and found my local AM
- station on shortwave. I guess the front-end is not good enough to
- sort the signals out when coming from a large antenna. But don't
- worry about this either.
- If you only want to listen to the biggies like BBC, Deutche
- Welle, you won't need an external antenna. I am planning to put
- a Pre-selector between The Radio and the Antenna, and I think
- this will cure the problem of AM stations on shortwave and cut
- out some interference. Finally I recommend this radio to you. I'm
- sure you will have hours if enjoyment from it.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Grundig Satellit 500 - 2
-
- Formerly Grundig's flagship portable SW receiver, this is
- still an excellent piece of equipment. Excellent sensitivity and
- selectivity. Digital display with two separate clocks (only
- one displayed at a time), signal strength meter, frequency
- readout, and four-character user-definable "name" for each
- memorized station. 42 memory positions. Tunes to .1 kHz
- increments. Selectable wide/narrow bandwidth for AM mode
- reception. Tunes MW in 9 or 10 kHz steps. Keypad frequency entry.
- In addition to AM, has three receiving "modes" for LW, MW, and
- SW: USB, LSB, and "Sync," which should more accurately be
- described as "fine tuning," as this implementation of synchronous
- detection operates differently from the Satellit 700 or Sony
- 2010. Selectable automatic/manual gain control. Covers LW
- (150-353 kHz), MW (528-1611 kHz), SW (1612-30000 kHz), and FM
- (87.5-108 MHz).
- Excellent audio output, with separate treble and bass controls.
- Stereo through headphones. Line-level out (mono), external
- antenna, and 12 VDC-in jacks. Local/DX switch.
- Built extremely rugged. Power supply included.
-
- An all-around great performer. Now that it's discontinued,
- many outlets are selling this unit at close-out prices, making
- this radio an excellent value for the money.
-
- Purchased from Universal Radio for $379 in December, 1992.
-
- I have a Grundig Satellit 500 and am basically satisfied with it.
- I miss the 512 memories of 700 and 'SSB clarify' control sometimes.
-
- Yes, its 'sync' is exactly fine tuning in 100 Hz steps. However,
- it is rather simple to make it work similarly to '700 and '2010,
- because the detector chip is the same in all three. Only a switch
- with two pairs of contacts is needed. Another design fault, the
- excessive distortion in SSB mode, can be partly cured by adding
- two resistors. For serious DX-ers it may be important that the
- internal ferrite rod cannot be disabled on MW and LW in both 500
- and 700, so the in-house noise may become a problem on these
- bands.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Lowe HF-150 - 1
-
- The Lowe HF-150 (sold by Universal and EEB) is a nice compromise.
- Similar number of cubic inches as the Sony (different shape), but
- offering some features of the R8. Also the Lowe is made with a
- mostly solid alumnum case, which is better than the Sony or the
- Drake. The Lowe has dual antenna inputs (wire or SO-239), record
- out, audio out, 12vDC in. It can run off any 12V DC battery.
- I use 7 aH gelcells which I recharge. The Lowe also takes
- 8 internal AA nicads *OR* disposable batteries. It will recharge
- the nicads with a builtin recharger if you plug it into
- an external power supply. It's a nice semi-portable radio. It
- has a few ideosyncracies, but you might want to look at it.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Lowe HF-225 - 2
-
- I've had an HF-225 for a few years now, and I'm pretty happy with
- it. I use it mainly for broadcast listening. It's connected to
- 25m of random wire via a 5m coax run inside the house.
-
- I tried using an ATU to improve the matching between the aerial
- and the coax, and on some frequencies it gave a (small)
- improvement in signal strength, but it was such a pain to keep
- retuning that I gave up using it.
-
- I recently bought a "magnetic longwire balun", and this seems to
- offer the best of both worlds - improved matching between the
- wire and the coax, but no retuning necessary. It's rather
- expensive, though, and it may be that I'd have been just as well
- off with a home brew transformer on a ferrite ring...
-
- The other potential advantage of an ATU, filtering out of strong
- signals well away from where you're listening, seems to be
- completely irrelevant on the HF-225. I've never yet found a case
- where switching in the attenuator did anything beneficial. The
- receiver's front end seems to be excellent in this respect.
-
- I've got the sychronous detector option, and I wouldn't be
- without it. It quite often makes a heavily fading signal quite
- pleasant to listen to. Pity it doesn't have a selectable
- sideband option, though - I quite often find myself tuning an AM
- signal in the LSB or USB modes to try to get rid of an adjacent
- interfering signal.
-
- Would I buy it again? Yes, unless I decided that I really wanted
- a receiver which offered a computer interface.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Sony SW-1 - 2
-
- I bought an SW1E over a year ago, for listening to broadcast SW
- and FM at home and while travelling. I like this very small radio
- a lot. It is maybe expensive for a portable, but the build
- quality is very good, - everything looks and feels right.
- Battery life is good, and the set DOES work with NiCads (2*AA)
- contrary to the instructions. Reception of broadcast SW is good,
- either with the whip or clothes-line antenna. I've never noticed
- any big problems from adjacent channels either. As a bonus, FM
- stereo reception is good through headphones. Audio quality from
- the in-built speaker is fair, but you'll want to use phones for
- noisy environments. The only bug with this radio is the memory
- capacity - only 10 mems is really not enough to cover ALL of AM
- and FM.
- Summary - if you want a very small portable, and appreciate high
- quality (and can afford it), I would recommend the SW1E. Note the
- E, which denotes the SW1 kit without the active antenna and brief
- case - these add a lot to the price, and I don't rate the antenna
- too highly either.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Sony SW-15 - 1
-
- I bought one of these puppies on impulse the other day (at my age you
- should give in to the occasional impulse, just so they keep coming).
- Cost $85; you could probably do better by shopping the discounters.
-
- Specs:
-
- Dual Conversion Receiver, 6 1/2 x 4 x 1 1/2 inches, 3 AA or 4.5v DC.
-
- Nine Bands:
-
- FM: 76-108 Mhz, 10.7 Mhz IF.
-
- SW: 5.775 -6.425; 6.875-7.525; 9.375-10.025; 11.6.5-12.265; 15.00-15.65
- 17.50-18.15; 21.325-21.975. 1st IF 10.7 Mhz; 2nd IF 455 Khz.
-
- MW: 530 - 1710 Khz; 455 Khz IF.
-
- Analog Tuning dial, volume control, music/news tone switch, 7 position
- SW band selector. FM/MW/SW select buttons double as "on" switches.
- "Off" button. "Hold" button to disable "on" (prevents accidental
- turnons) Slide rule, multicolumn frequency display. Hand strap,
- foldout stand to hold at angle on table, soft carrying case. Basic
- shortwave guide. Telescoping antenna. FM/MW/SW "on" and tuning LEDs.
- Mono earphone jack.
-
- Subjective Review:
-
- I'm pretty impressed. Sensitivity is up there with the Pomtrex [:-)]
- without the "splatter" of strong stations. Analog tuning dial
- requires a delicate touch but for me that's part of the fun. Drift
- seems nonexistent; you get a station and it keeps it without a lot of
- vernier twiddling. MW performance was surprisingly good, as was FM.
- I'd recommend it as a starter radio.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Sony ICF-5100 - 1
-
- I bought this radio in Kuala Lumpur in 1988, and I'm not sure if
- it goes by the same model number in other parts of the world. It
- is a shirt pocket analog tuned radio with coverage from 6MZ to
- about 21MZ in seven bands. The radio is very rugged and has
- served me well despite of the physical abuse it has gone through.
- Because of its small size the speaker is only small and the sound
- from it it a little tinny, but I used it mainly to receive news
- in countries without English language news services and in remote
- areas while camping etc. I recommend this radio to anyone, who
- considers size the most important factor. Cost was about US$70.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Sony ICF-7601 - 2
-
- In some respects this is my favorite radio. No bells no whistles
- no FM stereo -- just a good solid (feels like a small brick)
- analogue unit. It covers AM, FM and has 10 SW bands that cover
- most of the "out of band" frequencies. Band switching on SW is
- done by a slide on the front of the radio while buttons are used
- to switch from AM to FM to SW. The dial is accurate to 5 kHz so
- is very easy to locate a station. I believe that it was simply
- the best low cost analogue rig out there. It's still around and
- can be had for well under $100.00. Grab it!!
-
- I have a 7601 also. Most of its weight is from the batteries and
- the speaker, giving it better tone and volume than smaller,
- lighter sets.
-
- As with other cheap analog sets, it wasn't very hot out of the
- box.
-
- If you "super tweek" the 7601, it's pretty good on AM, but no
- match for a 2010 or Superradio III. Most of the shortwave bands
- peaked up well, but I never could get 19 meters working right.
- As with most analog portables, the whip is part of the RF tuned
- circuit, so one must be careful to duplicate the exact listening
- conditions when tweeking the radio. Even the presence of
- headphones will shift the antenna tuning.
-
- Unfortunately the 7601 picks up FM stations at various places on
- the shortwave bands. If you're far enough away from FM and TV
- stations you might have room for an R-390.
-
- When going on trips I usually take my SW-1 because of the
- convenience of the presets and the reception flexibility provided
- by the active antenna that comes with it.
-
- *****************************************************************
- Sony ICF-SW33 - 1
-
- I've owned this radio (SW33) for about 9 months and use it as my
- "carrying around the house rig." It was purchased to replace a
- Sony 7601 that now resides on my desk at college (things
- electronic can grow legs on a college campus). By far the best
- features of this unit are its convenient size and excellent
- performance on all bands, AM, SW and FM stereo. Don't get me
- wrong -- this is not a DX machine on SW but for listening to the
- major broadcasters, it's excellent.
-
- The single filter selection seems just about right and tuning on SW
- is in 1 kHz intervals. This at least gives you a "fighting chance" to
- move away from interference. That's a major improvement over the
- 5 kHz that many radios in this price range allow. In addition, the
- dual conversion design on SW keeps image interference at bay - a
- major plus for a small portable.
-
- The radio does not have a keypad so entering frequencies is a bit
- clumsy. However, by entering the middle frequency of each of the
- major SW bands in the 7 memories (5 memories plus 2 timer
- memories) and slewing up or down from those positions you can
- get around reasonability fast. The SW bands are changed by a
- combination of 2 keystrokes.
-
- The sleep control (shuts the radio off after 1 hour) can let you be
- lulled to sleep and the timer alarm can make sure that you get to
- work on time (radio shuts down after 2 hours if it is turned on by the
- timer). Setting the radio alarm is very easy - once you have set the
- clock, but that frankly, is a pain. The clock function, which works
- very well (combination world/home time), takes at least 7 distinct
- steps to set it. Fortunately the clock is fairly accurate (looses about
- 0.2 sec/day) so you don't have to reset it very often. The lighted
- dial (stays on for 20 sec at the touch of a button) is a nice touch.
-
- Battery life is excellent contrary to the 1994 Passport to World
- Band Radio (see below). The radio has a battery "gauge" that is
- activated at the touch of a button radio and shows in the display
- as a battery icon with 3, 2, 1 or 0 dots inside of the battery outline.
- It disappears after about 5 seconds. As soon as the number of
- dots reaches 0, the radio shuts off immediately. I ran a a series of
- tests with Radio Shacks Super Alkaline batteries and got the
- following results: 3 dots showed for 37 hours, then 2 dots showed
- for an additional 11 hours, and finally 1 dot showed for 3.0 hours
- for a total of 51 hours. (Radio ran 1.5 to 2.5 hours/day with the
- volume control set at 1/2 volume most of the time). At $2.89 (plus
- 5% for tax) for a package of four AA batteries (the radio takes 3),
- that figures out to 4.5 cents/hour which is excellent. This figure differs
- greatly from that given in the 1994 Passport (25-30 cents/hour). I have
- no explaination for the difference but I stand by my test values.
-
- Would I recommend this radio to anyone? If you do a lot of band-
- scanning, forget it; it will drive you crazy. But at about $140.00 plus
- shipping (NYC mail-order) it's an excellent "second" radio to carry
- around for listening to the major broadcasters. I like it!
-
- *****************************************************************
- Realistic DX-440 - 2
-
- I have a DX-440 and I think it is a good 'dabble' radio but if I
- ever get serious I will look for a > $500 table model.
-
-
- I love this radio! It's my main radio and I use it
- exclusively at home, moving it from room to room. It really is
- too large for travel
-
- I've found the sensitivity to be tremendous on SW, MW
- and FM! Very rarely do I need to attach a clothsline
- antenna! It has continuous SW coverage, a great sounding
- speaker, BASS and Treble controls, two bandwidths, great
- sensitivity, good spurious signal rejection...It has
- all the features I wanted in a starter radio! I bought
- it about three years ago on sale for $150.00! I still
- don't know why Radio Shack discontinued it. If you're
- looking for a good starter shortwave radio and can still
- find one laying about at a Radio Shack store priced to move,
- GRAB IT!
-
- *****************************************************************
- DAK DMR-3000 - 1
-
- I bought this radio since they have a 30-day money back guarantee
- and I did not know if I would like the hobby or the radio. Good
- points: direct-entry tuning, 36 station memories, fairly small so
- it is easy to travel with, speaker sound was good, reception was
- okay, but improved dramatically with the addition of the Radio
- Shack 23' rollup longwire ($8.95). Bad points: only 5kHz tuning
- steps, only major broadcast bands tunable (large gaps between
- bands), selectivity not so good, no fine tuning, no BFO, no SSB
- or CW, poor FM reception. All in all, not a bad radio of $69.90,
- however, it left me wanting for more, so I got rid of it.
-
- I have seen a couple of posts asking for a low cost SW receivers.
- I have recently bought a DAK Model DMR-3000, for just
- $69.90+$6.00 shipping from DAK - a mail order company.
- The receiver has a direct access, so you can type in the desired
- frequency, and a manual / automatic scanning system. It also has
- a dual time clock with alarm and 'sleep' timer. Unfortunately you
- can tune only to the commercial frequencies on SW, AM and FM
- bands. I have to say though that cheapness comes at a price. The
- first receiver I got was defective so I had to ship it back and
- ask for a replacement. Now, I received a new one which works very
- well.
-
- Compared to my Sony ICF-7601 the DAK unit is an insensitive
- brick. The fancy clock and timer features aren't really worth it.
- About the only thing nice is the FM Stereo support if you plug in
- headphones but the FM sensitivity leaves much to be desired as
- well.
- Something else to watch for.... That pretty lettering on the
- buttons will wear off REAL fast. If you haven't used it much yet
- you won't see a wear off REAL fast. If you haven't used it much
- yet you won't see a problem. After you've done some tuning you'll
- see the pretty arrows disappear from the buttons.
-
- (Continued in part 2)
-