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			Michael,
 Get the DEGEN DE1103 I found it to be almost as good as the S350 with
 the advantage that it is portable and cheaper than the CCRadio and
 S350.  The only drawback is that the sound in "narrow" band is not as
 good as any of the other mentioned radios below.  But boy, it is
 really narrow and sensitive in MW.
 
 JCJ
 
 
 "Michael"  wrote in message .  net...
 "lsmyer"  wrote in message
 ...
 I decided to test some radios today to see which of them I would recommend
 for simple AM dxing to anyone who asked. The six radios I tested are Degen
 DE1102, GE SRIII, Radio Shack DX-398, Radio Shack DX-402, Sangean U1, and
 Tecsun BCL2000.
 
 I went to a local park at 1:00 pm and found an area with no nearby power
 lines. I started each radio at 530 KHz and I tuned up through the entire
 dial, noting the signal strength and clarity of what I heard (if anything)
 on each frequency. I also rotated each radio on each frequency to see if
 it
 could pick up a signal in any position.
 
 Sensitivity: Despite being the least expensive out of the group, my trusty
 SRIII picked up at least a whisper of a station on nearly every single
 frequency (A+). Second was the BCL2000 (A-), third was the DE1102 (B+),
 fourth was my DX-398 (C-) and DX-402 (C-), and in last place was my U1
 (F),
 which picked up stations on the least number of frequencies.
 
 Selectivity: There are other factors in AM listenability, though. One of
 which is handling adjacent channel spatter. Of all the radios, the SRIII
 seemed to be best at pulling 700WLW (175 miles away) out of the spatter of
 two local stations on 680 and 710. The DE1102 was second, and the BCL2000
 third. One oddity about the BCL2000, even though it allowed me to hear WLW
 between the two other stations, for some reason, WLW was being covered by
 an
 image of a local low power travel station on 1610 that overmodulates
 horribly. None of the other radios picked up any images.
 
 Internal noise: No surprise here. The three analog radios, the SRIII (A+),
 BCL2000 (A+) and U1(A+), all had lower internal noise than the three with
 digital tuning, DX-402 (C) DX-398 (C-), and DE1102 (D).
 
 Dial readability: All of those with digital displays were obviously easier
 to read. The DX-402 (A+) and the BCL2000 (A+) have accurate and large
 high-contrast displays, the DX-398 (B) and the DE1102 (C) were smaller but
 still accurate, the UI isn't very accurate but it's easy to see (C-), and
 the SRIII has the least accurate and least seeable display of the pack
 (F).
 
 Portability: All six are portables and can be operated by batteries. The
 three large analog radios can be heavy, but all three have good carrying
 handles. The three smaller radios do not have handles. The DE1102 stands
 out
 here for being the smallest by far (A+). The U1, however, is really too
 big
 to carry for very long, despite having the best handle of the bunch, and
 it
 should get the F in this category.
 
 Sound quality: Though highly subjective, I like the sound of the three
 bigger radios best. You can turn up the U1 until your ears hurt and it
 still
 doesn't distort. The U1 has by far the most bass and volume but little
 treble (A), the SRIII has good bass and treble and medium volume (B), the
 BCL2000 has slightly less bass and treble, and comparable volume (B-), the
 DX-398 (D) and DX-402 (D) are virtually identical with some bass some
 treble
 and even less volume (D), and the DE1102 (D-) has some treble, no bass,
 and
 very little volume until it starts distorting. Of course, all of these
 radios sound better with headphones, but that wasn't what I was seeking.
 
 Conclusion: I couldn't imagine getting rid of any of these radios. It
 would
 be so tough to try to pick just one for me to own. Each one of these has
 at
 least one feature that makes it a favorite in some category. And my little
 comparison doesn't even take into account two of the most important
 categories to some people: memory operation and external antenna
 performance. But of my six radios tested, three were clearly losers
 (DX-398,
 DX-402, and U1) and three were clearly winners (SRIII, BCL2000, and
 DE1102).
 
 Of the three winners, the SRIII is the most sensitive, has very good
 sound,
 is noise-free, and is the least expensive, but the radio's display is so
 bad
 that serious dxing is virtually impossible for me without another radio
 nearby to tell me what frequency I'm listening to. The DE1102 and the
 BCL2000 aren't too far behind the SRIII in sensitivity and both offer a
 digital frequency display that's easy to see. And though the DE1102 is a
 fine little radio (in fact, it is an incredible performer for its size),
 the
 BCL2000 beats it in nearly every category for me (sensitivity, sound
 quality, internal noise), so I would have to pick the BCL2000 as my
 unscientifically-preferred choice for AM dxing.
 
 
 I would like to know how the CCrane Radio Plus would have done.  I'm tempted
 to get one, but I've heard that it isn't narrow enough to DX a weaker signal
 next to a strong local.
 
 I have a SR III and as you do, I find it to be wonderfully sensitive and
 possessing outstanding audio quality.  It's narrow setting is good for
 DX'ing.  As sooooo many people point out, the tuner set up is a dud.   I
 also have the KA1102 and I like that as an mw radio too.  It is indeed more
 noisy then the SR III, but the digital tuning is a big attraction for using
 it on mw vs. the SR III.
 
 So... I was hoping the CCcrane Radio Plus would be the answer.  It is made
 for mw, it has a big ferrite bar and it is digital... BUT.... I just keep
 thinking about the band setting not being narrow enough to DX with it.
 
 What to do ????
 
 Michael
 
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