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A FreeView tuner for radio.
Dave Plowman (News) schreef:
A pal has a small manufacturing facility where the radio is on all day. It's been cobbled together using his Hi-Fi throw outs but last time I heard it sounded remarkably good. The speakers are a rather kicked pair of Tannoy Yorks slung from a roof truss and driven by a Quad 303. ;-) It's mainly on R1 FM with occasional bursts of R5 for footie. The tuner, branded Goodmans is pretty old and has died. It occurred to me since the MW reception is pretty diabolical due to interference from the machines etc, that a FreeView tuner might be an easy and cheap option. There is a UHF aerial feed available. Any thoughts on make for something reliable and stable and cheap? There's a computer network available, also with Internet ? Internet radio could than be a solution, an seperate iRadio or dedicated pc... Freeview ? don'loose the remote or break it, otherwise it still gets expensive... -- Bedankt, Thanks, The Fug. VoIP/SIP switched by: www.mysipswitch.com (A free service sponsored by www.blueface.ie) |
A FreeView tuner for radio.
In article ,
TheFug wrote: Dave Plowman (News) schreef: A pal has a small manufacturing facility where the radio is on all day. It's been cobbled together using his Hi-Fi throw outs but last time I heard it sounded remarkably good. The speakers are a rather kicked pair of Tannoy Yorks slung from a roof truss and driven by a Quad 303. ;-) It's mainly on R1 FM with occasional bursts of R5 for footie. The tuner, branded Goodmans is pretty old and has died. It occurred to me since the MW reception is pretty diabolical due to interference from the machines etc, that a FreeView tuner might be an easy and cheap option. There is a UHF aerial feed available. Any thoughts on make for something reliable and stable and cheap? There's a computer network available, also with Internet ? Internet radio could than be a solution, an seperate iRadio or dedicated pc... Sounds an incredibly complicated way to listen to the radio. And given the youngest part of this setup is at least 15 years old, how many modern PCs have a life anywhere near that? Freeview ? don'loose the remote or break it, otherwise it still gets expensive... Yes. I'm thinking, as Owain suggested, two tuners and keep the remotes somewhere safe. Assuming the tuners will boot up to the channel they were last on - the system gets powered down nights and weekends. Via a master isolator for the entire place which makes things difficult to leave them powered up. -- *Change is inevitable, except from a vending machine* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
A FreeView tuner for radio.
On Sun, 11 May 2008 16:47:35 +0100, Oddjob wrote:
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... A pal has a small manufacturing facility where the radio is on all day. It's been cobbled together using his Hi-Fi throw outs but last time I heard it sounded remarkably good. The speakers are a rather kicked pair of Tannoy Yorks slung from a roof truss and driven by a Quad 303. ;-) It's mainly on R1 FM with occasional bursts of R5 for footie. The tuner, branded Goodmans is pretty old and has died. It occurred to me since the MW reception is pretty diabolical due to interference from the machines etc, that a FreeView tuner might be an easy and cheap option. There is a UHF aerial feed available. Any thoughts on make for something reliable and stable and cheap? One with a channel display would be user friendly. Another possibility is to use one with a Favourites facility. My old Goodmans GDB3 (there are several clones of this) will let you set up channels as favourites then step through them with P+ and P- buttons. You don't really need a display for two radio stations! -- Mick (Working in a M$-free zone!) Web: http://www.nascom.info http://mixpix.batcave.net Filtering everything posted from googlegroups to kill spam. |
A FreeView tuner for radio.
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus In article , tony sayer wrote: Why not go for FM something like a second-hand Denon MK 260 MK 2 can be had quite cheap on ebay?.. As I explained they also listen to MW for sport etc and the interference levels are high. The current tuner is AM/FM. So I reckon either Freeview or DAB to give these MW stations. But DAB tuners tend to be expensive and (given my experience) might also need their own aerial. Right-o... Course you could run in an external aerial for MF?.. -- Tony Sayer |
A FreeView tuner for radio.
In article , mick
wrote: Another possibility is to use one with a Favourites facility. My old Goodmans GDB3 (there are several clones of this) will let you set up channels as favourites then step through them with P+ and P- buttons. You don't really need a display for two radio stations! I've been using a cheap Philips DTTV box as a 'radio tuner' for some time. Not really been hampered by the lack of a display. Need the display with a Nokia, though. That won't let you switch between 'TV' and 'sound radio' stations simply by typing in the station number. You have to use the 'navigation' (menus). Similarly, refuses to let you select a list of 'favourites' that include both. Daft bit of ergonomics. Slainte, Jim -- Change 'noise' to 'jcgl' if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
A FreeView tuner for radio.
Dave Plowman (News) schreef:
In article , TheFug wrote: Dave Plowman (News) schreef: A pal has a small manufacturing facility where the radio is on all day. It's been cobbled together using his Hi-Fi throw outs but last time I heard it sounded remarkably good. The speakers are a rather kicked pair of Tannoy Yorks slung from a roof truss and driven by a Quad 303. ;-) It's mainly on R1 FM with occasional bursts of R5 for footie. The tuner, branded Goodmans is pretty old and has died. It occurred to me since the MW reception is pretty diabolical due to interference from the machines etc, that a FreeView tuner might be an easy and cheap option. There is a UHF aerial feed available. Any thoughts on make for something reliable and stable and cheap? There's a computer network available, also with Internet ? Internet radio could than be a solution, an seperate iRadio or dedicated pc... Sounds an incredibly complicated way to listen to the radio. And given the youngest part of this setup is at least 15 years old, how many modern PCs have a life anywhere near that? Freeview ? don'loose the remote or break it, otherwise it still gets expensive... Yes. I'm thinking, as Owain suggested, two tuners and keep the remotes somewhere safe. Assuming the tuners will boot up to the channel they were last on - the system gets powered down nights and weekends. Via a master isolator for the entire place which makes things difficult to leave them powered up. If you doo use a subscription, keep in mind that the powerdown situation, could have effect on the update function, Otherwise, check all software menu's also for the "boot-up" preset, most of the time it's also the channel during it was switched off at... Also most remote controles are Infra Red transmitting, which means, that the receiver can be locked away in a see-through cabinet, or when near to window, you can also switch off, when you allready closed up. Infra Red range extenders are also available... for poor reception of the DVB-T signal itself, there are also active antenna's, the receiver should have an option to power these though...(if not provided externally...) -- Bedankt, Thanks, The Fug. VoIP/SIP switched by: www.mysipswitch.com (A free service sponsored by www.blueface.ie) |
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