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Poll
Question: What Portable Radio Did you start your listening hobby with?
Radioshack DX-398/Sangean ATS-909 - 4 (6.3%)
Realistic DX-440/ Sangean 803a - 5 (7.8%)
Yard Sale (Unknown Brand) - 2 (3.1%)
Grundig/Eton Portable Series (List model in a reply post if you like.) - 4 (6.3%)
TecSun/Degen Portables(List model in a reply post if you like.) - 1 (1.6%)
Other (List model in a reply post if you like.) - 48 (75%)
Total Voters: 60

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Author Topic: What Radio Did you start your listening hobby with?  (Read 7532 times)
Tom S
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« Reply #60 on: October 11, 2012, 2043 UTC »

My very first SW radio was a Racal RA6790/GM receiver which I was tasked to tune the HF spectrum by my Uncle Sam when I was a guest at one of his many worldwide resorts, this one being Clark Air Base in the Philippines.  Unfortunately they wouldn't give me one of my own to play with, so my own very first SW receiver was a Sony boom box with SW coverage that I bought at the BX.  I soon grew frustrated with the lack of SSB/CW reception, though I could easily pick up Radio Australia.  

So when I transferred to England I bought a Sony 7600, the first model that tuned in 5 KHZ steps.  I eventually upgraded to a Sony 2010 which I still own to this day.  I've owned several other receivers, including a RS DX394 (big mistake, will never own another), Icom R71a, and currently use an Icom R75 and a Target HF3S.  I can also use my Kenwood TS-140 ham rig as a third receiver.  I also have an old Hallicrafters S-38B which I play with from time to time, and an old Zenith Transoceanic 3000-1 (transistorized version).  I also have a RS DX-402 portable AM/SSB receiver that I couldn't pass up at a hamfest for $35.  It makes a nice portable to take traveling when I don't want to risk damaging the 2010.

Currently I have the R75, TS-140, and HF3S as well as two scanners sitting on my radio desk with audio outputs connected through a switch box to my headphones and computer sound card input.
« Last Edit: October 12, 2012, 2104 UTC by Tom S » Logged

Happiness is a good antenna system.

Live audio from my shack:  http://n2uhc.listen2myradio.com
Nomad
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« Reply #61 on: October 17, 2012, 0449 UTC »

Sony SW7600GR.

Nothing beats listening to that long into the warm Suburban nights with good company, my best friend and my first (and current) love
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Northwest Radio
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« Reply #62 on: October 28, 2012, 0736 UTC »

My start, yee gaads. As a toddler I was fascinated with a vintage/antique radio my grandmother had in her home. With a bit of help from her, I heard my very first SW signals via its massive speaker. As I grew, she allowed me to operate it myself (Age 5 or 6 or so). I spent hours on a tall stool in front of it. I later in life discovered that it had a large rotatable helix/loop antenna in the cabinet. Wire and wooden dowels. Pretty cool.

It was an RCA Victor. Unsure of them model number but this is a photo of the exact radio I just found while producing this post. Man, I am gonna cry... (grin)

« Last Edit: October 28, 2012, 0739 UTC by Northwest Radio » Logged

Seattle Washington running Flex-1500 SDR, Yaesu FT-897, Yaesu FRG-100, Kenwood TS-440S, Realistic DX-394/DX-160/Pro-2051/Pro-2052
OCF Windom/Dipole 173' Length @ 49' AGL, 14mhz Delta Loop, 41' Vertical, Gutters, Kites, and Fence wires
Billy the Mountain
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« Reply #63 on: October 30, 2012, 2155 UTC »

A transistorized Zenith Transoceanic my grandfather had.  This was the 70's.  We only visited once a year or so, so I would sit and listen to the BBC, foreign broadcasters, and of course WWV.

Graduated to a Sony 2010 right after college (still have and use).  Had an R390/A for 20 or so years, recently parted with it.  I now use my trusty old TR7 mostly, although I'm dabbling in SDR and phasing direct conversion radios. . .
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Somewhere in MO.
TR7/Sony 2010/40m dipole/Various other aerials.
Beerus Maximus
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« Reply #64 on: November 01, 2012, 0021 UTC »

Who would part with an R390/A!  Shocked
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Billy the Mountain
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« Reply #65 on: November 01, 2012, 1358 UTC »

They take up a ton of space, they weigh a ton, and honestly, there are better receivers out there.  I thoroughly enjoyed mine (complete with meters), but it was time to move on. 

The small sailboat I bought with the money has better dynamic range, but poorer selectivity.
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Somewhere in MO.
TR7/Sony 2010/40m dipole/Various other aerials.
ninly
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« Reply #66 on: November 08, 2012, 1513 UTC »

Enjoying this thread.

The SWL bug bit me in 2005, and I got an Eton e10 for Christmas that year. Listened to a lot of stuff (mostly SW broadcast) with a longwire on that little thing, from Brooklyn, NY. I don't exactly remember the radio fondly, but it got me started, and the bug burrowed deeper. Less than six months later I had my ham ticket, and bought a Yaesu FT-757GX at a hamfest upstate. I was eager to get on the air myself ... but the damn thing had a broken TX. So I was back to listening, though now with a much better receiver. Started listening to pirates, which peaked around Halloween 2008. My now-wife and I then decided to move to Alabama, and radio took a backseat while I established myself anew. Recently got back into HF, finally, with anew shack setup for listening and ham stuff. Still pretty bare-bones, but having a blast.
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jc1974
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« Reply #67 on: November 19, 2012, 2124 UTC »

I started as a SWL is late 2003 with a Sony ICF2010 & Wellbrook Loop 1530 (the blue indoor one, which got stolen from my backyard, but its been replaced with a metal one). Art Bell from Coast to Coast AM was what got me interested after hearing him talk about the weird and strange things you could hear in the middle of the night on one of his shows. Around 2006 I kinda was obsessed with recording & archiving as many hams calling cq as possible, but that faded away after awhile. Here are some of the recordings: http://archive.org/details/Ham_2

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Rafman
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« Reply #68 on: December 09, 2012, 1623 UTC »

I started at 10 years old with a BC-312-D Army receiver [0.5-18MHz] that I got from a CB friend of my family's. I had a friend who also had one & when I was about 14 we started DXing together, each recording the audio to 1 track of a reel-to-reel recorder.
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Rafman
- Listening near Buggs Island, Virginia 23917
- on Perseus SDR / Afedri SDR / Alinco DX8R SDR / Racal 6790 / Kenwood TS850S
- with Mizuho SX59 & SX3 Preselectors, Grove TUN4A Preselector, JPS AN-4 Noise Filter
- Main Ants: 7MHz Full Wave Loops@50'   Secondary Ant: 3MHz Center Fed Zep
radioreddz
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« Reply #69 on: December 23, 2012, 2330 UTC »

a radio shack DX 160 that i still have. sold a kawasaki 100cc dirt bike to get money for it. had to have it next to my cb radio equipment. it must have been 1974 or 75. i used a 30' length of speaker wire for the antenna.
« Last Edit: December 23, 2012, 2331 UTC by radioreddz » Logged

listning to the world on 200' of wire  assisted by a host of Hallicrafters,Icoms,Heath Kits and Radio Shack radios.  Stevo in Maryland
vk3fz
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« Reply #70 on: December 27, 2012, 1114 UTC »

marconi cr 100 naval rx
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cyberflexx
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« Reply #71 on: December 27, 2012, 2147 UTC »

Radio Shack DX392 and a DX350.. These are still my current shortwave receivers.  I have a Pro29 scanner and a Bearcat XLT 10ch scanner base as well.  Somewhere in storage is a cobra cb with SSB that runs 'hot' as well..
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BoomboxDX
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« Reply #72 on: December 29, 2012, 1904 UTC »

Cyberflexx, is your DX-350 the one that's branded as a Realistic or the one with the Radio Shack brand on the front?  Just wondering, as they are basically two separate radio designs.
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An AM radio Boombox DXer.
+ GE SRIII & TRF on MW.
The usual Realistic culprits on SW (and a Panasonic).
cyberflexx
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« Reply #73 on: January 01, 2013, 1916 UTC »

Cyberflexx, is your DX-350 the one that's branded as a Realistic or the one with the Radio Shack brand on the front?  Just wondering, as they are basically two separate radio designs.

Says radio shack  made in china.. Not the better of the two i dont think.
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Token
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« Reply #74 on: January 03, 2013, 1649 UTC »

a radio shack DX 160 that i still have. sold a kawasaki 100cc dirt bike to get money for it. had to have it next to my cb radio equipment. it must have been 1974 or 75. i used a 30' length of speaker wire for the antenna.

Ahhh, one of these:


(not in the order shown, but includes: DX-100, DX-150, DX-150A, DX-150B, DX-160, and DX-200, elswhere around here I have the DX-75, DX-300, and DX-302, as well as several portable DX series radios)

T!
« Last Edit: January 03, 2013, 2059 UTC by Token » Logged

T!
Mojave Desert, California USA
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