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Mike Walker said:My S350 (a late model, just before the DL was introduced) doesn't exhibit much drift at all. In fact, after it's been left on a half hour or so (and the internal temperature stabilizes), there is very close to zero drift. But the tuning "lock" IS a mixed blessing. It tries to "lock" before you've reached the frequency you're after. So if you're trying for 580khz, and it locks on 583, the only option is to give the dial a quick turn to unlock it, then tune back until you get it right. A PAIN! Once locked, though, it stays that way.
Early models got the unfortunate nickname of "S Three Drifty". Probably deservedly so.
Of course every analog radio drifts. Most just don't have a digital frequency counter to show you how much!
The S350 id definitely not for everybody. You either love it or hate it. It IS very sensitive to weak shortwave and am signals, and does sound quite nice (with bass and treble controls, plus dual bandwidth). But if you don't like the way it tunes, you probably never will. I don't mind it so much. I can live with "quirks". Radios have 'em. People too. It's part of what makes us charming. I enjoy my S350 so much, I've considered buying an S350DL. Even with the same speaker and amplifier, it should sound slightly better as the slightly larger cabinet will allow ever so slightly better bass response. Not enough of a difference to spring for now. But in time I will. In time I seem to buy most every popular radio out there. I'm a radio junkie!
Now, about those Sangean HD radios! As they say around these parts "them sure looks purty!"
My understanding, is that with analog, drift can never be totally eliminated, but I didn't know, that there was such a thing as analog PLL (is this what the S350 has ?). Grundig should have put some sort of time-delay, before the tuner locked on. I do admit, that the S350 has excellent audio, where as obvioulsy, my Sony is only good for talk/news. That is what happened to me, with the S350 - I saw it in RS and "fell for a pretty face" (not the first time that has happened). Obvioulsy, my understanding of radio is limited, but the RadioIntel review of the Sony stated that they guessed, it has the same receiver chip, as the more expensive Sony digital PLL radios - not sure, what that means. It is a real shame, because the quality of SW receivers today, doesn't seem to be anywhere near the old DX-440 and Sony ICF-2010 (both, of which I had at one point, darn). I'de have a closet full of radios too, if I could, but my wife wouldn't understand. I have gone through a bunch of different radios, but the Sony just reminds me of the 1960's transistor radios - kind of nice, listening to WABC Saturday Night Oldies, with a transistor-type radio, again.