Depends where you are of course, I have a 50KW amedium-wave transmitter about 20 mile from me which causes hell! and I've received correspondence from other people who have the same radios as I do, one person tells me that part of the band with his CC EP is totally unlistenable due to a high powered transmitter in his area though he has no trouble with the CC SW because of its dual-conversion circuit, you will also see the differences acknowledged at the CC web site so the CCrane company is being honest and standing behind their range.

Nothing wrong with the CC EP radio of course, if you live away from high powered transmitters then it should do you quite nicely.



On 29/05/2011 4:02 PM, Steve Jacobson wrote:
Dane,

I just wouldn't expect this to be a problem with a double-tuned loop.  It has 
been pretty common for medium wave radios to only have single conversion
even when the short wave bands have double conversion.  If the loop tunes too 
broadly, a strong medium wave station can theoretically overload even
the front end of a dual conversion radio.  Some of the older Sony's suffered 
from this, for example.  Therefore, I'm disappointed to here this is the case.

Does anyone have recommendations for a sensitive AM and FM pocket radio?  I've 
been really frustrated with how pocket radios seem to overload badly
on FM in high-level input areas.  I have a Grundig Yachtboy which I like, but 
it is a little bigger than I want to carry around and I just don't listen to
shortwave much any more.

Best regards,

Steve Jacobson


Best regards,

Steve Jacobson

On Sun, 29 May 2011 02:41:07 +1000, Dane Trethowan wrote:

Hi!
Since the CC EP radio got a mention in a roundabout way I'd like to say a few 
words regard this set.
Yep, its very sensitive no doubt about that but it does have some problems and 
this is understandable given the price, after all $70.00 is a very small
price to pay for a radio.

If you're living near a very strong medium wave transmitter as I do then it may 
be that your CC EP won't perform at its best due to interference from that
transmitter, this I'm told is due to the "Single Conversion" circuitry used in 
the CC EP.

To Illustrate the point, suppose you're tuning through the medium wave band, 
you think you're hearing signals from far away when actually you're hearing
what appear to be ghosts or shadows of the local high powered transmitter 
instead.

The Solution? Well there are several you can try, the most obvious is to spend 
say $50.00 more and purchase the CC SW which has a Dual Conversion
circuit and you notice the difference straight away.  The CC SW is not perhaps 
exactly as sensitive as the CC EP but its far more selective for one thing
and you certainly don't get the ghosting or shadowing I spoke about for 
another, I've several CC Radios and I reckon the CC SW would have to be the
best CC Radio set I own.

I reviewed the CCSW on Blind Cool Tech a little while ago so you'll find the 
review there.
Blind Cool Tech also has a review of the CC EP from last year and I've just 
done a review of the CC II radio which is more sensitive than the CC EP
however it suffers from the same problems due to its single conversion 
receiving circuit, this review is still awaiting approval to the blind cool 
tech site.


On 02/01/2000, at 5:09 AM, tim cumings wrote:
Don I'd recommend the cc radio e p from c crane. It's a portable am/fm analog
radio that costs about $70. It has very nice tone and sensitivity and works 
well on both bands. On
Fri, 27 May 2011 20:19:00 -0700, Donald L. Roberts wrote:


I am looking to find an A M F M table radio which doesn't cost much more
than $100 U.S.  The primary considerations are sensitivity, selectivity,
image rejection, and of course sound quality.  Although I don't really
care whether it is PLL or analog, I doubt that much analog stuff is
being manufactured.  Obviously, for a bit more than $100, I am not going
to find a great radio.  But please tell me what gives the best bang for
the buck.

Incidentally, the unit does not need to play CDs or have audio inputs.

Thanks for ideas.

Don Roberts

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