Our small non-profit FM radio station streams on the Internet. For logistical and financial reasons, the streaming computer sits in the file server room of our local wireless Internet service provider. By necessity, we receive the signal off the air via a tuner located in the same rack room. This is a less than ideal situation. Between all the file servers and a plethora of wireless Internet radios, the interference is horrendous. Most cheap FM radios don't work at all when they are anywhere near the location.
We've been using a Dayton Industries FM tuner that is intended for translator duty. It is coupled to an external FM Yagi. Until last week, it had been "acceptable" but not always what we wanted. Recently our ISP installed some more radios and computers that made the situation intolerable, unless you really like heterodynes and beat notes superimposed over the program material. In desperation, I decided to try my Sangean HDT-1 in place of the existing tuner. The difference is amazing. It is still subject to interference from co-channel skip conditions, which seem to be at a peak in Texas at the moment. Nonetheless, this radio made a huge improvement in the streaming signal. I'm impressed. It is a great analog tuner. If he HD part is of use to you, just consider that to be a bonus.
I have the HDT-! running on a very large UPS system, so hopefully, it will not lose power and revert to the "off" position. That would not be fun, since it is about a ten mile drive each way to pay it a visit just to push the "power" button.
Still, the tuner's ability to reject interfering signals is quite impressive.
We've been using a Dayton Industries FM tuner that is intended for translator duty. It is coupled to an external FM Yagi. Until last week, it had been "acceptable" but not always what we wanted. Recently our ISP installed some more radios and computers that made the situation intolerable, unless you really like heterodynes and beat notes superimposed over the program material. In desperation, I decided to try my Sangean HDT-1 in place of the existing tuner. The difference is amazing. It is still subject to interference from co-channel skip conditions, which seem to be at a peak in Texas at the moment. Nonetheless, this radio made a huge improvement in the streaming signal. I'm impressed. It is a great analog tuner. If he HD part is of use to you, just consider that to be a bonus.
I have the HDT-! running on a very large UPS system, so hopefully, it will not lose power and revert to the "off" position. That would not be fun, since it is about a ten mile drive each way to pay it a visit just to push the "power" button.
Still, the tuner's ability to reject interfering signals is quite impressive.