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#1
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Thanks everyone! Good point about no resale value, but it's not an
issue for me - I just want a small SW/AM/FM radio that I can take travelling and camping. All the best, - Frank |
#2
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"Frank H" wrote in message
.. . Thanks everyone! Good point about no resale value, but it's not an issue for me - I just want a small SW/AM/FM radio that I can take travelling and camping. The only time I'd be concerned with resale value is if I bought a high-end tabletop receiver. The DE1103 will work great for your intended purposes. It's a good performer, it's cheap, and it's the perfect size for traveling. I still think it's the best deal going in the realm of portable SW receivers that are less than $100. The only thing I dislike about this radio is the funky volume-control thing, but I got used to it pretty quickly. Jackie |
#3
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![]() "Frank H" wrote in message .. . Thanks everyone! Good point about no resale value, but it's not an issue for me - I just want a small SW/AM/FM radio that I can take travelling and camping. The last thing you want to do while travelling or camping is trying to figure out how to manipulate the radio - i.e. memory access, volume control, a useless LCD display that takes up almost 50% of the face of the radio. My rule for good radio ergonomics is - after initially studying the radio can the controls be easily and accurately controlled while blindfolded? Consider this the next time you are curled up in your sleeping bag. Of course most people don't buy a product considering its resale value. But that is not the point. The point is if you are deciding to purchase a product for keeps why compromise on poor ergonomics and memory access? You will kick yourself every time you turn it on. Then you WILL want to sell it! In the 1103's case you will either give it away or throw it against the wall on your way to buying another more user friendly product which you should have purchased in the first place. Ref: $130 Sony ICF-SW7600GR - it comes with a Sync Detector which is not available in any other new portable at any price. It's resale value is not $zero because it is a desirable product. ALL of its controls can easily be manipulated blindfolded. Including its memories. Its performance it its price class is second to none. Especially when teamed with a highly desirable AN-LP1 antenna. Hey, its your travel/camping time and money. It's only a hobby. |
#4
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Thanks for the recommendation, Jackie!
- Frank |
#5
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Thanks Dogg, good points. Must admit I've also been tempted by the Sony
ICF-SW7600GR. Why can't I find it on the Sony web site though (at least their Canadian site) - is it discontinued? Hard to find? - Frank |
#6
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Frank H wrote:
Thanks Dogg, good points. Must admit I've also been tempted by the Sony ICF-SW7600GR. Why can't I find it on the Sony web site though (at least their Canadian site) - is it discontinued? Hard to find? - Frank I think that Sony is phasing out their shortwave radios. That's what I've heard, anyway. They've already done away with most of their models. The Degen 1102 has far better ergonomics and almost as good performance as the 1103, for the same price. I greatly enjoy my 1102, I use it exclusively for the time being while my Yaesu is out of commission. |
#7
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SeeingEyeDogg wrote:
"Frank H" wrote in message .. . Thanks everyone! Good point about no resale value, but it's not an issue for me - I just want a small SW/AM/FM radio that I can take travelling and camping. My rule for good radio ergonomics is - after initially studying the radio can the controls be easily and accurately controlled while blindfolded? Consider this the next time you are curled up in your sleeping bag. Of course most people don't buy a product considering its resale value. But that is not the point. The point is if you are deciding to purchase a product for keeps why compromise on poor ergonomics and memory access? You will kick yourself every time you turn it on. Then you WILL want to sell it! In the 1103's case you will either give it away or throw it against the wall on your way to buying another more user friendly product which you should have purchased in the first place. Ref: $130 Sony ICF-SW7600GR - it comes with a Sync Detector which is not available in any other new portable at any price. It's resale value is not $zero because it is a desirable product. ALL of its controls can easily be manipulated blindfolded. Including its memories. Its performance it its price class is second to none. Especially when teamed with a highly desirable AN-LP1 antenna. The Sony SW100 is the same basic design and feature set as the SW7600GR, including the SYNC, but squeezed into a package the size of an audio cassette case. It delivers the same radio performance as the 7600, but uses less batteries and is much less weight to carry if travelling on foot. Being much smaller it doesn't have the same speaker power or quality, but through headhpnes (or through a hifi system -- it has an audio-out jack as well as phones) its quality is superb. That having been said, the quality Sony have managed to extract from a very small speaker in a very small box is remarkable. It's particularly well-designed from an ergonomic point of view, and they've thought about the problems of operating it in the dark. The keys vary is shape and placement so you can identify them in the dark, and there's a small bump just under the phone jack socket to help you locate it by feel in the dark. The LCD panel has a backlight which you can turn on, and because it's a clamshell with the keys below the screen, it (just) lights up the keyboard. There is nothing cheap about this radio. It was designed as a flagship of Sony technology to dismay other manufacturers, a "beat that if you can!" challenge. I think it got killed by accountants after Akio Morita's death ("Mr Sony"). It was his last personally championed product, and after he died Sony started listening to the accountants who pointed out that Sony wasn't making money selling it. For its feature set, and for a small light general purpose portable radio package for the backpacker, with very good SW performance, IMHO it can't be beaten. I think it may be still be available on a few shelves, although no longer in production. Ebay is a good source, and it holds its value well if it's the later model with the improved clamshell hinge and slightly improved performance. http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/gadgets/SW100.html -- Chris Malcolm +44 (0)131 651 3445 DoD #205 IPAB, Informatics, JCMB, King's Buildings, Edinburgh, EH9 3JZ, UK [http://www.dai.ed.ac.uk/homes/cam/] |
#8
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Chris,that big floral clock in Princess Street Gardens,in Edinburg,is it
still there and working? I remember back in the 1950's at the old Paramount movie theater that used to be on Capitol Street here in Jackson,Mississippi,I saw that floral clock in a Movietone Newsreel.There is a little town by the name of Edinburg (and a Dublin and a Scott too) here in Mississippi. cuhulin |
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Returning lurker asks: is the DE1103 still the cat's meow? | Shortwave | |||
Returning lurker asks: is the DE1103 still the cat's meow? | Shortwave |