Well I have one of these radios on my hot hand I can tell you that the audio doesn't mute but the level drops when the dial is turned, yes that part is correct but its far from an annoyance as you seem to suggest, in other words as the dial is turned you can still hear the audio.



On 28/04/2016 1:42 AM, André van Deventer wrote:
I listened to a youtube demonstration of this radio.  You could clearly hear 
the break in audio when the tuning knob was turned even on USB.  I understand 
that the tuning knob has clicks.  So if you tune for example through the short 
wave frequencies there is a very slight break  in audio  for each click.  This 
was in fact what also irritated this specific interviewer.

I'm in the market for a good portable receiver but I would not like something 
like that for tuning shortwave bands and especially doing USB work.



-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Dane 
Trethowan
Sent: 27 April 2016 12:30 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: A Few Words On The Eton Satellite Radio

And where has it been said the audio is interrupted when the tuning knob is 
turned? I don’t recall any mention of that do you?


On 27 Apr 2016, at 8:23 PM, André van Deventer <andred...@webafrica.org.za> 
wrote:

Must say what I find immensely  irritating with this specific radio is the 
sound of the tuning during bands.

Perhaps I come from the time of analog receivers where the tuning is smooth.  
Now every time that you turn the tuning knob and it clicks the audio is 
interrupted.  My old AOR 3000A receiver does this on the fm bands but not on AM 
and SSB.

I would be in the market for a portable receiver that has both the short wave 
bands and SSB mode, is reasonable accessible and does not have this annoying  
tuning feature.

André

-----Original Message-----
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of Dane 
Trethowan
Sent: 27 April 2016 11:25 AM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: A Few Words On The Eton Satellite Radio

The radio arrived yesterday.

For those who wish to find out more about the new Eton Satellite note that the 
Satellite in the name of the radio is spelt without the trailing E, I would never had 
known this if it weren’t for my Braille Display <smile>.

List members would have read the review of the radio I posted and I agree with 
pretty much every point in the review so there’s little point me going back 
over old ground.

Audio out of the speaker less than 3 inches in size is nothing short of 
impressive, not as good as the audio from the Tecsun PL880 but still good all 
the same and of course the speaker of the PL880 is a 4 inch unit so if its 
audio quality you’re looking for in a small unit then the Tecsun PL880 sets the 
bar though its slightly bigger than the Eton.

The Eton is well thought out in just about every way, everything from the 
double-jointed telescopic whip to the arrangement of functions.

The presets are arranged in pages, press the “Page” button and you can type in 
a number of a page of presets followed by the page button to get there.

Once there just press one of the preset buttons above the keypad or tune to a 
station and hold down the preset button for 3 seconds to set.

This Satellite is one of the very few radio sets around that performs well on 
each and every band and I can only say its about time.

The clicks when turning the jog dial feel most satisfying so you’re not going 
to accidentally turn 2 clicks instead of 1, certainly one of the best 
mechanisms I’ve seen in a jog-dial.

The speed of the dial can be changed either between fast, slow or off by 
repeatedly pressing the dial.

I’m extremely glad Eton chose to add an Aux-In function to the radio though 
this function isn’t immediately obvious to the user, the Line-out jack can be 
switched to an Aux-In jack so the user can take full advantage of the audio 
powered packed into the radio through an external source.

Stereo headphones sound really nice through this radio, perhaps a little quiet 
for some models of stereo but good enough for most.

so is the Satellite worth the $200 U.S. price tag? Most certainly and I have 
the feeling this is the last great Shortwave radio we’re going to see for quite 
some time, or perhaps this radio may well be the last we’ll see in a good line 
of radios, time will tell.


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