I have been using the R-390a for over 40 years in my shack. My shack is fairly extensive but I always seem to gravitate to using the R-390a for all types of listening. I have 3 of them including one at my cottage in the ultra-quiet listening environment along the shores of Lake Huron. I'm curious to know what other users think of them.
The R390a / URR is an undeniably good radio. I have two, a low serial Collins and a late Stewart Warner. The receiver noise is very good, very low noise. The LO phase noise is very good. And the pre-selecting tracking front end is outstanding.
But, I find I don't often use mine, other than just to use them because I specifically want to. While good they are not better than several other radios I own, indeed not as good as several, and they do not bring to the table some of the features of later radios. When I use it, I tend to set the R390a on a frequency or station and leave it there while I use other radios to actively do things. I treat them very much like I treat other old school radios I really like, my Collins 51J-4, Hallicrafters SX-28 or the Hammarlund SP-600, for example. I use them more for the nostalgia than any other reason.
For basic receiver capability I place several, many, of my other receivers ahead of the R390a. I feel that my Flex-5000a, Yaesu Fdx-5000, Icom R8600, and Winradio G33DDC all beat the R390a in every imaginable way. Several other radios I have here may fall behind the R390a in some way, but make up for it with the other features they bring to the game. For example my RFSpace NetSDR may not equal the R390a in receiver noise floor or front end blocking, but it brings so much else to the fight that I will still take the NetSDR every day over the R390a.
Time marches on, and while old school top shelf radios like the R390a are fun to use, and take me back to the first time I spun the dial on such radios, there are better radios to be had. Shoot, I still occasionally fire up the very first receiver I ever bought, a Hallicrafters SX-99 I have owned over 50 years. And that really is not a good receiver, but the memories I get out of turning the knob on that (and the LM-18 frequency meter I use with it) make it an old friend.
So the radio you use, as long as it is adequate for the task, is much less important that how you enjoy using it. But, if the radio you enjoy is something as good as the R390a, then so much the better.
T!