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Collins R-390 for home use.
Kenwood TS-140S for portable, plus it transmits. Good for marine use. Icom R-1 for wideband portable. Tektronix 2712 for wideband surviellance. HP 8565 and 8555 for slightly higher frequency coverage. For antennas I use magnetic loops, dipoles, log periodics, discones and yagis. Those portable little Grundigs lack input and IF filtering. I could run my TS-140S right next to a livestock fence shocking system and completely filter out the 10 kV impulses. The DAC shortwave I had (a cheapo) was wiped out. The TS-140S would be ideal for you. It's 100 watts SSB transmit. The Icom R-1 is physically too small and has bands where the reception is very poor. There's a few birdies in the thing also. The battery is small also. The R-390 doubles as a great anchor. Amen! "Capt. Rob" wrote in message oups.com... I listen only to short wave radio. It has a true "old time" radio effect, especially during solar flares and spy rays can't go over the short wave. What kind of SW radio? I bought a cheap S350 Grundig, not bad but kind of limited and drifty until temps are leveled out. I'd like to buy a cheap SW radio for the boat. RB 35s5 NY |