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#1
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Can anyone suggest a good, powerful, relatively small, battery operated
shortwave radio? I have a Sony ICS-SW20 right now but some frequencies that I find are not on the dial. I was looking at the Grundig Yacht Boy 400PE. Anyone have one of those or can anyone say something about it? Also, can someone recommend some interesting/good shows that I may be able to get on the radio I already have? Thanks in advance. --Ryan |
#2
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![]() "Ryan Logan" wrote in message ocaldomain... Can anyone suggest a good, powerful, relatively small, battery operated shortwave radio? I have a Sony ICS-SW20 right now but some frequencies that I find are not on the dial. I was looking at the Grundig Yacht Boy 400PE. Anyone have one of those or can anyone say something about it? Also, can someone recommend some interesting/good shows that I may be able to get on the radio I already have? Thanks in advance. --Ryan I will suggest a Degen DE1103 at the risk of incurring the wrath of xenophobes bigots and isolationists who haven't PLONKed me yet. |
#3
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![]() I agree with Sanjaya.... just from reviews and comments on this board. http://www.radiointel.com/phil/2005_phil_port_guide.pdf I used to have a Sony 7600 G series. ( Quite good ) Currently I have a Sangean 606A; No SSB but aside from that quite good. Degen DE1103 is a generation above Dan ( Doubtless incurring the wrath of xenophobes bigots and isolationists who haven't PLONKed me yet ) |
#4
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![]() "Dan" wrote in message oups.com... I agree with Sanjaya.... just from reviews and comments on this board. http://www.radiointel.com/phil/2005_phil_port_guide.pdf I used to have a Sony 7600 G series. ( Quite good ) Currently I have a Sangean 606A; No SSB but aside from that quite good. Degen DE1103 is a generation above Dan ( Doubtless incurring the wrath of xenophobes bigots and isolationists who haven't PLONKed me yet ) Shaking your hand and having a good laugh : ) |
#5
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Ryan Logan wrote in
ocaldomain: Can anyone suggest a good, powerful, relatively small, battery operated shortwave radio? I have a Sony ICS-SW20 right now but some frequencies that I find are not on the dial. I was looking at the Grundig Yacht Boy 400PE. Anyone have one of those or can anyone say something about it? Also, can someone recommend some interesting/good shows that I may be able to get on the radio I already have? Thanks in advance. --Ryan If you're considering a YB-400PE, I know it is readily available at Radio Shack (the G4000A is also the same). However, I suggest you consider a Sony ICF-7600GR, it is about the same price but a superior radio. |
#6
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![]() I will suggest a Degen DE1103 at the risk of incurring the wrath of xenophobes bigots and isolationists who haven't PLONKed me yet. Get the Sony ICF-SW7600GR - it will last far longer than any Degen Chinese junk which is riddled with RF images, by the way. Speaking of Chinese bigots and isolationists - have you heard about the Chinese rioting against Japanese goods? The Communist government has got them all whipped up into a nationalistic xenophobic frenzy to redirect the locals anger away from the dictatorial Communists - LOL! Support the your local anti-Communist China product - buy Japanese. |
#7
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I own a Degen 1103 and it is excellant. Rock solid reception. Check Ebay for
deals. I think it is about $70 I payed, including shipping. "Ryan Logan" wrote in message ocaldomain... Can anyone suggest a good, powerful, relatively small, battery operated shortwave radio? I have a Sony ICS-SW20 right now but some frequencies that I find are not on the dial. I was looking at the Grundig Yacht Boy 400PE. Anyone have one of those or can anyone say something about it? Also, can someone recommend some interesting/good shows that I may be able to get on the radio I already have? Thanks in advance. --Ryan |
#8
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![]() "running dogg" wrote in message ... Actually, most of the anger against the Commies is in the countryside from what I've heard, not in the cities where the demonstrations have been happening. The cityfolk are doing relatively well under capitalism, and people who aren't hungry and broke are less likely to rebel. Face reality, Li-the CCP isn't going anywhere, and as long as they keep their populace fed they won't. People across the world will tolerate outrageous abuses of power as long as they personally are well fed and comfy. The Republicans know this, for example. Veterans protest against the Communist Party in Beijing Beijing (AsiaNews/Reuters) - About 2,000 retired People's Liberation Army (PLA) servicemen protested in Beijing, demanding pension increases. On Monday and Tuesday, 1,500 retired PLA officers from 20 provinces wearing their old uniforms staged silent sit-down protests in front of the General Political Department, a branch of the PLA which oversees personnel, propaganda dissemination, song and dance troupes and athletes. On Wednesday, more than 400 retired rank-and-file soldiers staged a similar, albeit brief protest. Police and officials dispersed the protest by forcibly putting the petitioners on rented buses and sending them back to their hometowns. The back-to-back demonstrations from Monday to Wednesday (April 11-13) were the biggest by veterans in China since the 1949 revolution. "The government was caught unprepared . . . It is worried veterans will continue to link up and bring chaos to society," an anonymous source said. The Chinese government allocated US$ 60 billion to its military budget in 2004, but pensions for retired servicemen average 300 yuan (US$ 30). The authorities are concerned about the dissent among armed forces veterans because the Communist Party has always relied on the PLA to maintain its five-decade-old monopoly on power The demonstrations were all the more unnerving for Beijing which sent PLA troops backed by tanks to crush student-led pro-democracy demonstrations in Beijing's Tiananmen Square on June 4, 1989. The PLA also played a crucial role in ending the Cultural Revolution and removing the Gang of Four from power in 1976. http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=3043 __________________________________________________ __ China: Sixty thousand people protest against pollution http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=3036 China riot village draws tourists http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/4448131.stm __________________________________________________ __ Chinese history books silent on Tiananmen Shanghai (AsiaNews/Agencies) - Much of the history of the Twentieth Century has gone missing from Chinese textbooks; nothing is said about the 1989 pro-democracy movement, zero about the millions who died as a result of the famine caused by the Communist Party's agricultural policies during the Great Leap Forward, and even less is mentioned about the attacks by the People's Liberation Army against India and Vietnam. Since Chinese textbooks must be approved by central school authorities, only those that bear their mark of approval can be printed and distributed to classrooms. According to Yu Maochun, Associate Professor of History at the US Naval Academy in Annapolis (Maryland), "the rising nationalist tide has made rewriting history the national pastime of the Chinese" and Japan is the preferred whipping boy. In the textbooks, all those who died in the Sino-Japanese war of 1937-1945 are celebrated as heroes who "gloriously died" for China. In a textbook for eight graders used in Shanghai schools, the Japanese are described as "bandits who killed and wounded at least 35 million people". The paragraph that ends the chapter on the war says that "wherever the Japanese army passed through its soldiers burnt, murdered and pillaged. There is no crime that they did not commit". Recent violent, anti-Japanese demonstrations have also been fed by Chinese criticism of Japanese textbooks which tend to whitewash the crimes committed by the Japanese Imperial Army in China. Sin-ming Shaw, a Chinese student attending Oxford University, said that the "historical distortions contained in Japanese textbooks seem to stem from Tokyo's reluctance and shame to admit its past, whilst those in Chinese textbooks are designed to preserve the role of the Communist party. Hiding the truth is in both cases politically motivated". http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=3035 __________________________________________________ _ Cardinal Peter Seiichi Shirayanagi, Archbishop emeritus of Tokyo The Japanese prelate has apologised for the crimes of the Japanese Church during the war and has always sought a dialogue "with all the Catholics of China". .... In 1989, he organised a visit by a group of priests, sisters and lay people to the Catholic Church of China in order to meet Chinese Catholics from both the official and the underground Church. He sought to meet Communist Party officials to seek forgiveness for all the sins committed by the Japanese Imperial Army against the Chinese people and the Catholic Church in China. .... In 2000, after violent protests in Beijing against the canonisation of 120 Chinese martyrs, he said during a special solemn mass: "It is for us a great pain to see this event, which should be received with great joy for the Church in China, cause such a negative reaction. It is equally painful to see the canonised martyrs treated 'as conspirators of an aggressive imperialism'. .... http://www.asianews.it/view.php?l=en&art=3048 __________________________________________________ U.S. Warns Citizens of New Protests in China BEIJING/TOKYO (Reuters) - The United States warned its citizens in China Friday of possible new anti-Japan demonstrations, saying they could turn against foreigners in general, as Beijing stressed that illegal protests would be punished. .... The U.S. Embassy called on its citizens to be on guard, saying there were unconfirmed calls to stage protests this weekend in Beijing, nearby Tianjin, Shanghai, northeastern Shenyang, southern Guangzhou and Dongguan and southwestern Chengdu. .... "Because of the fluid nature of such events, American citizens traveling in China should be alert for demonstrations and or marches occurring at other times and locations without prior warning," a U.S. embassy e-mail said. "The demonstrations are purportedly against Japanese interests, but could involve foreigners in general." Chinese activists have called for more protests in Beijing and Shanghai this weekend by sending SMS and posting messages on on-line bulletin boards. Japanese Foreign Minister warned the protests could start to affect tourism. "You cannot stop tourists from avoiding (China) and deciding to go to another place after watching TV news," Kyodo news agency quoted him as saying. .... http://reuters.myway.com/article/200...1_PEK241135_RT RIDST_0_NEWS-NORTHASIA-DC.html _________________________________________________ |
#9
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" "running dogg" wrote in message
... Actually, most of the anger against the Commies is in the countryside from what I've heard, not in the cities where the demonstrations have been happening. The cityfolk are doing relatively well under capitalism, and people who aren't hungry and broke are less likely to rebel. Face reality, Li-the CCP isn't going anywhere, and as long as they keep their populace fed they won't. People across the world will tolerate outrageous abuses of power as long as they personally are well fed and comfy. The Republicans know this, for example. So..., what you are saying RunningDog is that the Communist Party doesn't care about poor people. Congratulations - that is 100% correct! |
#10
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The Degan DE1103 is an excellent choice. Not perfect, but it will hear
a lot of stations and the sound quality is impressive. |
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