M
mikerichardson
Guest
My first car was a Chevy Cobalt with the stock GM radio, a standard Delco model, and I remember getting some pretty good DX at night on that radio. One night I got some great DX from New Orleans and I am in Houston. Normally I get DX from the west - Austin and San Antonio and the like. I always figured it was because the Cobalt had a real, legit, screw on permanent antenna mounted next to the trunk. I got the best DX in the upper FM band, and I remember one time measuring the antenna and discovering that it was pretty close to being a "half wavelength" antenna.
I pulled the Delco radio because I wanted an AUX port but I got a lot less DX after that. The aftermarket unit was a Sony which was otherwise decent, still having RDS and everything, and I had SIRIUS hooked up as well. The antenna was the same.
Recently I rented a new Nissan Altima for a week and I noticed right away some great DX from Beaumont and San Antonio. And as far as I could tell, this car had a very short antenna, not even a quarter wave, yet I got some great stuff in this car. Maybe it was just a coincidence and it was a great DX night, but still, the radio was locking into DX stations on just the regular auto scan mode.
I have a '93 Chevy Van I use for work doing computer recycling. I bought it used several years ago and it literally had a Delco AM radio. No FM. This is definitely a 1993 model, and I had to check, but they actually sold this model with AM only radios. I think I had that radio recycled and put in a cheap JVC model since it's just a work van, but I never got any DX on there, even at night, and it has almost the same antenna as the Cobalt did - seems like it would be a quarter wave length antenna on the upper side of the FM band.
Even my parents' Hyundai Santa Fe, which has a crappy window antenna with the thin little lines, seems to get a decent DX now and then, even pulling in one 103.5 Bob FM from Austin one night.
So has anyone else concluded that, at least with car radios, OEM radios seem to do better for DX, compared to those aftermarket ones you get at Best Buy?
I pulled the Delco radio because I wanted an AUX port but I got a lot less DX after that. The aftermarket unit was a Sony which was otherwise decent, still having RDS and everything, and I had SIRIUS hooked up as well. The antenna was the same.
Recently I rented a new Nissan Altima for a week and I noticed right away some great DX from Beaumont and San Antonio. And as far as I could tell, this car had a very short antenna, not even a quarter wave, yet I got some great stuff in this car. Maybe it was just a coincidence and it was a great DX night, but still, the radio was locking into DX stations on just the regular auto scan mode.
I have a '93 Chevy Van I use for work doing computer recycling. I bought it used several years ago and it literally had a Delco AM radio. No FM. This is definitely a 1993 model, and I had to check, but they actually sold this model with AM only radios. I think I had that radio recycled and put in a cheap JVC model since it's just a work van, but I never got any DX on there, even at night, and it has almost the same antenna as the Cobalt did - seems like it would be a quarter wave length antenna on the upper side of the FM band.
Even my parents' Hyundai Santa Fe, which has a crappy window antenna with the thin little lines, seems to get a decent DX now and then, even pulling in one 103.5 Bob FM from Austin one night.
So has anyone else concluded that, at least with car radios, OEM radios seem to do better for DX, compared to those aftermarket ones you get at Best Buy?