Hello All, 
  
As reported earlier, the New Year kicked off with some unusually good high band 
TP signals (unusually good for this mediocre season, that is). Having just 
trashed the warranty on another of my C.Crane "Skywave" review units by 
installing a 7.5 loopstick, I decided to celebrate the fact by trying out the 
model in TP-DXing. In comparison to the 7.5" loopstick Tecsun PL-380 model, the 
new CC Skywave does have some distinct advantages for split-frequency DXers. 
Unfortunately, it also has some disadvantages. In order of importance, these 
are listed below: 
  
ADVANTAGES-- 
  
1)  In my opinion, the CC Skywave does provide superior DX station audio with 
its (default) "Music" setting when chasing DX with 1 kHz DSP filtering. The 
PL-380 tends to clip off the high frequencies in DX station audio in this 
situation, resulting in somewhat "muddy" audio and reduced intelligibility 
(especially when inductively coupled to a high-gain FSL antenna, which also 
tends to clip off the high audio frequencies in DX station audio). This is a 
subjective opinion, however, which is not shared by Chuck  
  
2)  The Skywave has the edge in the ease of inductive coupling to an external 
tuned antenna, like the FSL's. For some reason, its new Si4736 chip processes 
the gain boost from the external antenna almost immediately, whereas the 
PL-380's Si4734 chip has a slight delay, making it somewhat tricky to know 
exactly when the external antenna is exactly tuned on frequency. 
  
3)  The Skywave has a very convenient function to switch between the tuned 
frequency and a 24-hour time display, simply by a quick touch of the "Key" 
button. Any time you wish to check the UTC time, you can do so by touching this 
button, and switch back to the frequency display immediately. This is perfect 
for completeing live-DXing log sheets. 
  
4)  The Skywave has selectable 1 kHz tuning, unlike the PL-380's jumbled system 
of switching between 1 and 9 kHz tuning steps according to your rotation speed 
of the tuning knob. This makes it much easier to control the tuning process. 
  
DISADVANTAGES: 
  
1)  The Skywave has no selectable display light. Why (oh why) did C.Crane let 
this model get out of the door without this basic function? A lot of TP-DXing 
is done in the dark, especially on ocean coasts prior to sunrise. You will need 
a flashlight in these situations. 
  
2)  The Skywave's audio amplifier is pretty wimpy, in comparison to that of the 
PL-380. It's easy to max out the volume control when listening to a weak DX 
station. This issue would be more noticeable when DXing on a barefoot Skywave, 
though, since a huge FSL gain boost usually compensates for this. 
  
3)  There is no display of the Skywave's volume control level. This drawback is 
more of a distraction because of the lack of a powerful audio amplifier, as 
described in #2, above. You don't know that you will hit the upper stops on the 
volume control until you actually do it (over and over). 
  
4)  The Skywave's signal level bar graph is pretty pedestrian in comparison to 
the PL-380's RSSI and S/N level displays. It also lacks the PL-380's 
temperature display, and several of the PL-380's search functions. 
  
5)  The C.Crane's $89.95 price (before shipping) is "Sky High" compared to that 
of the PL-380 (roughly twice as much).  
  
73 and Good DX, 
Gary DeBock (in Puyallup, WA, USA          
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