Dear Terri,
I can't help much when it comes to brand names, but it seems to me that analogue tuning is superior to digital, particularly when it comes to a.m. radio. I found a cassette deck, radio combination at a junk shop. It was made in the early 70s, and it doesn't record properly, but it picks up a.m. radio like you wouldn't believe. It cost $10, Canadian, and was worth it just for that. My sony stereo - digital - can't pick up an a.m. station to save its life.
Cris Hall
At 08:08 AM 06/11/2004, you wrote:
Hello everyone,
First of all, I'd like to say thank you for your thoughts so far, on this
situation.
Now I have a couple more questions.
If I purchase a different boombox, than the Sony I bought, is it likely that
I'll run into the same problem I have with this one?
I want to be able to pick up NPR without getting that Christian station
bleeding in.  Like I said, I never had this problem with my analog boombox.
Also, how exactly does digital tuning work?  And how is it different from
analog tuning?

I was able to find two boomboxes on the Circuit City website, that use
analog tuning.  However, they are made by brands that I'm not familiar with.
I don't want to buy one of them, to just have to replace it a few months
later, because it wasn't that good.
One was made by Nexxtech.
And I believe the other one was made by ESA, but I'm not sure if I'm
remembering that exactly right or not.
Has anyone ever heard of either of these brands?  If so, do you know how
good their stuff is, or isn't?
Thank you,
Terri


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