
May 11th 08, 03:17 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
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?
--
*If at first you do succeed, try not to look too astonished.
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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May 11th 08, 03:47 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
"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.
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May 11th 08, 04:42 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
wrote:
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?
FWIW I use a cheap Philips DTTV box with a scart-phono adaptor for
listening to radio and TV sound in the room where I use this computer.
Forgotten the model number. Works OK.
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
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May 11th 08, 06:09 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
In article ,
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.
One which displayed the actual service would be even better still - like
DAB or RDS does. But I've never seen this on a FreeView tuner - I suppose
for obvious reasons.
--
*Ever stop to think and forget to start again?
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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May 12th 08, 07:51 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus
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?
Ask him how much he wants for the Yorks Dave???
--
Tony Sayer
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May 12th 08, 08:13 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
In article ,
tony sayer wrote:
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus
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?
Ask him how much he wants for the Yorks Dave???
Heh heh - you're not the first to ask this. The answer is since he has to
listen to the system when he's there he'd rather have something decent,
and isn't short of a few bob.
--
*He's not dead - he's electroencephalographically challenged
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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May 12th 08, 09:06 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus
In article ,
tony sayer wrote:
In article , Dave Plowman (News)
scribeth thus
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?
Ask him how much he wants for the Yorks Dave???
Heh heh - you're not the first to ask this. The answer is since he has to
listen to the system when he's there he'd rather have something decent,
and isn't short of a few bob.
 ...
Well at least it'll be loud and sound good  )
Why not go for FM something like a second-hand Denon MK 260 MK 2 can be
had quite cheap on ebay?..
I've got a few MK 1 units here surplus to requirements..
--
Tony Sayer
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May 12th 08, 09:59 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
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.
--
*Money isn‘t everything, but it sure keeps the kids in touch
Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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May 12th 08, 10:21 AM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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A FreeView tuner for radio.
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message
...
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.
Or there's Freesat, around here MW is completely useless, the only station
that comes in at anything like usable quality is BBC world service on
648kHz, everything else is buried under the mush, but I can get them from my
Sky box if I need to, along with Radio Scotland and many other previously
"exotic" stations. But if your friend already has a UHF aerial Freeview is
probably easier.
David.
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