Signal said:I've got the standard factory radio with whip antenna in my 1999 Ford Ranger.
Good for you--that's a real plus.
Signal said:I've got the standard factory radio with whip antenna in my 1999 Ford Ranger.
tfcwings said:I know of someone who, using a 2006 Ford Ranger's radio and whip antenna, heard 8.5kW 650 KGAB from Orchard Valley, WY (near Cheyenne) until he crossed the Mississippi River in St. Louis, 792 miles away. Also, using the same radio, he heard 50kW 640 KFI Los Angeles to just east of Willcox, AZ (50 miles W of the AZ/NM border, 506 miles from KFI) and 50kW 700 KALL North Salt Lake City, UT, into the western part of New Mexico, probably over 617 miles away. He also heard 250-watt non-dir 690 KWRP Pueblo, CO, 193 miles away about 40 miles into Kansas on I-70.
Would the car radios from the 1960s, for example, be much better at midday AM DX than that?
For example, using a portable radio and tuned loop antenna, I've been able to hear 50kW 680 KNBR San Francisco, CA (445 miles), and 50kW 700 KALL North Salt Lake City, UT (626 miles), at my house, in spite of being only 32 miles from 77 kW 690 XEWW Tijuana, Baja Calif Norte. With a reasonably selective and sensitive car radio and antenna, should I expect a better signal from KALL with less splatter from XEWW?
cyberdad said:Let me put it this way.... When I snagged WLS on the north shore of Oahu in February 1965, it was on a 1962 Chevy Impala car radio.
To make a broad-brush statement, the 60s car radio had good to very good sensitivity and fair sensitivity. Of course there were exceptions.
The GM/Delco radios may have been the best, but Ford was right up there with them. We had a '66 Ford Galaxie 500 with a factory radio that was fabulous for DX. Chrysler radios were also pretty good, but my memory is they were a bit more "finicky" and malfuction-prone. As it was, with all of them, you had to make sure that your electrical system was in good working order. A worn distributor cap or deteriorating sparkplug wires (or sometimes even sparkplugs themselves) invited noise that would negate any DX.
One issue was that some GM models had an antenna trimmer pot that you could adjust with a small screwdriver, IIRC. On the '62 Impala, you located it by removing the tuning knob (or maybe the on/off-volume knob. I forget). Problem was, the trimmer had a tendency to eventually drift out of adjustment for no apparent reason. Most people had no idea that the pot even existed...let alone how to adjust it. The result was you had a lousy-performing radio instead of a good one!
That was the case originally with my Mom's '62 Impala, as well as at the end of the decade with my college roommate's nearly identical model.
He was from Boston. I removed the knob, and provided him with "Instant WBZ"....in Iowa! As a token of gratitude, he allowed me the occasional private use of the Chevy's back seat!
upstate29651 said:What happened to a standard metal (encased in a plastic sheath) "whip" antenna, or even the rear window mounted ones?
cyberdad said:One ISSUE was that some GM models had an antenna trimmer pot that you could adjust with a small screwdriver, IIRC. On the '62 Impala, you located it by removing the tuning knob (or maybe the on/off-volume knob. I forget). Problem was, the trimmer had a tendency to eventually drift out of adjustment for no apparent reason. Most people had no idea that the pot even existed...let alone how to adjust it. The result was you had a lousy-performing radio instead of a good one!
That was the case originally with my Mom's '62 Impala, as well as at the end of the decade with my college roommate's nearly identical model.
He was from Boston. I removed the knob, and provided him with "Instant WBZ"....in Iowa! As a token of gratitude, he allowed me the occasional private use of the Chevy's back seat!
I had a VW beetle with an AM radio when I was in college in the Tampa/St. Pete area when the top station was WLCY/1380. I had large speaker that perfectly fit into the top of a small beer keg which I installed behind the rear seat - GREAT sound! Would rival any digital bass you can feel coming down the road today.I'm just a stinker about liking the continuous tuning of old radios.