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I loved that one; when it used to be made in Germany not the elcheapo version.I was. Till my Grundig Sattlelit DXing "hand me down" set folded up.
DXing was the next best thing to the internet. I still know my bands.
13,16, 19, 25, 31, 41, 49, 60, 70, 90 Most popular were the 19, 25, 49 meter bands. The world was at our finger tips.
Sangean is really good.Tecsun PL-600 with 6 meter Antenna
and i'm thinking of buying Tecsun 330
Tecsun PL-330 radio
Tecsun PL-330 is a portable PLL DSP multiband receiver with SSB and Synchronous Detection. The DSP microchip digitizes the analog radio signal which, in combination with the PLL (Phase-Locked Loop) circuitry, greatly improves the radio's sensitivity, selectivity, S/N ratio and anti-interference...www.anon-co.com
Used to have ICOM 706 more than a decade ago when I lived in Canada.Any folks who are or were shortwave radio listeners?
What were your radio stations? Do you still listen to shortwave broadcasts?
Equipment used?
Antenna?
I started listening to shortwave at the age of 8. To hear overseas stations plus foreign languages. that started me into this career. I still do listen but a lot of stations have shutdown permanently.
Favourite stations:
- Radio Netherlands
- BBC
- Hunt for other broadcasters:
- Radio Uzbekistan, Czech, Poland, DW, Radio France, then tune in to low bands for our continent.
- On Medium Wave - pick up here KSA, Radio Monte Carlo.
Equipment I have is regular shortwave:
Sony ICF7600G.
Specialised : Kenwood R1000 still going strong.
Antenna: I have a large Rhombic directional array.
Favourite stations:
- Radio Netherlands
- BBC
- Hunt for other broadcasters:
- Radio Uzbekistan, Czech, Poland, DW, Radio France
Not sure All India Radio is still broadcasting on SW; Radio Pak appears to have ceased - they were being heard here but i was told they never bothered to upgrade the amplifier valves.Nice to know SWers on this forum.
My father had an old National two-in-one and until 2010 ( the year the set got irreparably damaged ) I used to listen mainly to Radio Netherlands and BBC World Service. But sometimes ( rarely ) to Radio France International and Deutsche Welle. Once or twice China's too.
For some years I would get monthly ( or was it once in four months ? ) program booklets from Radio Netherlands. I forgot what they were called.
On BBC among my favorite programs were Charlie Gillet, Outlook and a few others ( I forgot their names ) which were 15 minute readings of a book from Monday to Friday, a business program and a program on computing. I got to know of SpaceX from that business program.
You must be joking? Really? wow. Sangean, Tecsun etc. all made there in China. I had the Degen as well; it goes with me when i travel.Used to have ICOM 706 more than a decade ago when I lived in Canada.
When I moved to Shenzhen, it became impossible to hear anything over RF noise of the big city.
13 years ago though I had a cousen who had no problem getting to hear broadcast HF from Australia, and US on a good night with the same 706 in Guangzhou without tuners or anything.
HF rigs are now near impossible to buy in China. Funny given that they are all made here.
It's also near impossible to get a legal callsign after 2017. Most legal rig owners I knew got their licenses a decade, and more ago as militia members.
Still nothing beats the magic of shortwave.
wow... National... that was tape recorder/radio combo - I used it for over 2 decades; I think i still have it - about 40 some old.
Similar to this - no FM - Just AM, SW1, SW2, SW3
National Panasonic Stereo Radio Cassette Recorder Radio Panasonic, |Radiomuseum.org
National Panasonic Stereo Radio Cassette Radio Panasonic, Matsushita, National ナショナル also tubes;, build 1988 ??, 4 pictures, Japan, schematics, tubeswww.radiomuseum.org
I was hopeing that digital mode would take hold on hf but internet streaming put this to rest.
Sale of transmitters is heavily, heavily regulated. I would not risk buying a new one these days for the fear of being caught in the new round of spy-o-mania. You can't catch anything almost anywhere in China so strong is the RF noise from cities. Even in the complete middle of nowhere villages in Guangdong, RF noise is like you are in a city downtown anywhere else.You must be joking? Really? wow. Sangean, Tecsun etc. all made there in China. I had the Degen as well; it goes with me when i travel.
ic706 is a hf/vhf/uhf transceiver. You will need amateur radio licence if you decide to transmit. Are you also a ham radio operator? I am radio op - been one for over 38 yrs now. I use FT-857D plus a grinel TR11.
can you let us know if shuguang is back producing transmission tubes?
YEs, you need to write a complete licence, undergo security background check as well.Sale of transmitters is heavily, heavily regulated. I would not risk buying a new one these days for the fear of being caught in the new round of spy-o-mania. You can't catch anything almost anywhere in China so strong is the RF noise from cities. Even in the complete middle of nowhere villages in Guangdong, RF noise is like you are in a city downtown anywhere else.
My cousin has a class 2 license from his years in militia. I used to play with his rig in my teen years. Now, it's just a rather dangerous paperweight.