You may perhaps even be able to control your radio via your computer.

I have an older AOR AR3000a  which I use in that way.  Very nice to know
what you are doing and exactly on which frequency you are.



-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Dane Trethowan
Sent: 19 December 2011 10:10 PM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Radio Notes

Hi!

I purchased a Sangean ATS909X "World Band" receiver quite some time ago and
I'm now only putting the set through its paces.

I could write pages and pages about this unit and I'll do that on my blog in
the future I'm sure but I do feel that this set deserves praise for its SSB
reception.

Tuning round the 8-9MHZ frequency range this morning I was able to listen to
the "Flying Doctors" service, the reception wasn't brilliant but I was able
to identify the organisation and "Julia Creek", that's a town in Central
Australia.

Now I've never received this before and - whilst Its obviously possible to
receive the service as I proved - I always thought you'd need a bigger
aerial than I was using, I just used the built-in telescopic whip of the
radio which is around 6 feet long.

Perhaps what makes things different these days is the absence of a lot of
traffic from the SW bands.

For those interested in this radio I recommend it as it is one of the few
these days to offer both dual conversion circuitry and a variable RF-gain
control across all frequencies from 100-29999KHZ.

The set also comes equipped with a very nice "DSP" which brings the radio
alive! when listening to medium-wave broadcasts where a strong signal is
next to a waker one, the DSP allows the weaker signal to be heard
intelligibly.

For those who have a computer then you can add extra facilities to the radio
by use of the data sockets on the bottom, what these extra facilities
actually are I'm not sure but I suspect you can hook the radio up to your
computer to use software which will decode morse, teletype and DRM
broadcasts.

Just a few first thoughts for what they're worth <smile>.



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