Just back from an overhaul at the RAW shop in Dubai.
Nice bedroom system (with the right CDs!)
Still have fond memories of my Advent 400 with the great assortment of FM stations back in the San Francisco Bay Area. I was a bit disappointed in the yellowing of the bright white plastic case though. Supposedly there's no remedy.
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They can be remedied. It involves some kind of mixture made with hydrogen peroxide. The downside is that the yellowing will return at some point and will likely be worse than it was before. This is a common issue with any electronic product made with beige molded plastic.
As far as my own table radios go, I have the following:
CCrane EP-Pro- got this one from a local ham who sells antenna accessories and radios as a sideline to his main business. It's a very good radio and I'm glad to have it. Sound good on FM and does AM DX very well, but I think that antenna adjuster is more of a gimmick than a useful, necessary feature.
Realistic MTA-15- Got this one recently at a thrift store. Its FM reception in my suburban area is pretty bad without an external antenna, and it suffers from FM multipath in a way that none of my other radios have ever done. Its AM is quite good especially considering its pathetically small ferrite antenna. I know size doesn't always matter, but I can only wonder how it would do with a ferrite bar that's more appropriate to the size of the radio. That said, the sound on the local stations I use is very clear, almost better than my CCrane. It's DX capable, but tends to only get the strongest of clear channel stations.
In the portable tabletop range I have a Grundig S350DL that I got for less than $20 because it wasn't working. I opened it up and it was full of cold solder joints. I got it working, and it's pretty good, but maybe not absolutely great.
Also have two 5Core T-291 radios from India. This is a true analog tuning radio on a chip with a varicon capacitor. I have two because the first one arrived with something rattling around in the case, and I requested an exchange from Amazon. They told me to keep it and they would send another. These work well enough, though the AM seems to allow a strong station to crowd the band a bit. THere's a place on the circuit board that appears to be for a ceramic filter that's jumpered with a wire, so I may experiment a bit and see if a filter might tighten up the AM bandwidth a bit.
In the past, I had a Tivoli Model One. It's FM had a nice sound and the AM was good enough, though I was hoping for better DX performance out of it. That's not its niche, though, so no need to try and make it do something it's not made to do. I'm thinking about getting another one, or one of the other radios that's similar from Sangean, Boston Acoustics etc.
-Thank you,
-William