If you're referring to the SRF-42, that still uses Sony's multi-system decoder chip; they just removed the 90° phase shift circuit to properly reproduce the Kahn system. Also there's a trick to improve its FM sound quality by crushing the tiny surface-mount capacitor marked C14 on the circuit board to disable the FM high-blend feature which makes weaker signals sound muffled.I have the later version that was CQUAM only.

Most of the Sony FM Walkmans were of fair-to-poor quality, and got worse as time went on. They were especially prone to front-end overload, causing spurious reception products all over dial. I had an SRF-A1 in Kansas City, where I lived just a few miles from the transmitting sites of KYYS, KCMO-FM, and KQRC, all full class-C stations. On the Sony units, nothing from outside the market could come in at all, particularly not KLZR from Lawrence or 107.3, which was then a rimshot from Odessa. The SRF-A1 was a little better on FM than most other Sony Walkmans, but still had the problem with overloading.I have the later version that was CQUAM only. FM was mediocre at best, but AM stereo sounded good. I used it a lot in the mid 90's when KWLO 1330 Waterloo, Iowa was one of my locals and had oldies in AM stereo.
That's what the DX/Local switch is for.Most of the Sony FM Walkmans were of fair-to-poor quality, and got worse as time went on. They were especially prone to front-end overload, causing spurious reception products all over dial.
Which, in my experience, is ineffective, and indicative of a bad design to start with.That's what the DX/Local switch is for.
Not bad, just built down to a price. Plenty of car radios in the 1980s had a manual LO/DX switch, too.Which, in my experience, is ineffective, and indicative of a bad design to start with.
I know the KVON pattern is aimed away from the greater Bay Area, but didn't know what reception was like in Vallejo, which is roughly 15 miles away from Napa, and the KVON array is on the south side of Napa.In my brothers house on my Sangean DT200X, I can't pick up 1440 KVON
On my SRF-A1, I could just hear the Stereo Pilot, or what ever you call it
Which means they're...bad. If you can't get even nearby signals due to spurious products all over the place, then what you've got is a bad radio.Not bad, just built down to a price.
I have an SRF-A100 and find the FM quite good. And the AM is outstanding.Most of the Sony FM Walkmans were of fair-to-poor quality, and got worse as time went on. They were especially prone to front-end overload, causing spurious reception products all over dial. I had an SRF-A1 in Kansas City, where I lived just a few miles from the transmitting sites of KYYS, KCMO-FM, and KQRC, all full class-C stations. On the Sony units, nothing from outside the market could come in at all, particularly not KLZR from Lawrence or 107.3, which was then a rimshot from Odessa. The SRF-A1 was a little better on FM than most other Sony Walkmans, but still had the problem with overloading.
The only two Sony Walkman models that are worthwhile on FM are the first one, the SRF-40W, and its successor, the SRF-30W. The 30W is slightly less sensitive than the 40W but otherwise similar. The 40W was fairly decent for its time and had much less of an overloading problem than the later units. They show up on eBay often.
By the way, the SRF-A100, which was legendary for its AM performance and flexibility in AM stereo decoding, was absolutely horrific on FM. The de-emphasis was wrong, the sensitivity was lacking, and the front end overloading was even worse than a typical Sony FM Walkman.
I was like walking to Safeway, Still can't get KVONI know the KVON pattern is aimed away from the greater Bay Area, but didn't know what reception was like in Vallejo, which is roughly 15 miles away from Napa, and the KVON array is on the south side of Napa.
KVON didn't have such a great signal in the town of Sonoma either, though it was definitely receivable there.

I got this for $13.17 at a Antique Store for
FM didn't work at first, But it's working now
Dirty, But not home, In Vallejo
The only Stereo I got on AM was KDYA 1190 Vallejo
View attachment 9509
Which ones? I grew up in the 80’s and never saw or heard of a car radio with a manual LO/DX switch.Plenty of car radios in the 1980s had a manual LO/DX switch, too.
The “local/distant” switch tended to be on aftermarket car stereo systems, not original radios that came with the vehicle. Big business back in the day, before automakers upgraded their entertainment systems and made them more tightly integrated into the overall electronic system.Which ones? I grew up in the 80’s and never saw or heard of a car radio with a manual LO/DX switch.
Not sure they were bad designs. If you look at the circuits, most Walkmen had circuitry similar to the boomboxes and clock radios of the day -- front end chip for FM, IF chip, maybe a multiplexer chip if the IF chip didn't have the FM multiplexing/stereo output integrated. Maybe one or two ceramic filters at best. And remember, on FM the Walkmen had to work off the headphone cord as the antenna, so the RF front end chip had to be fairly robust because of the vagaries of the cord's positioning while the user was jogging, working out, biking, out walking or studying, etc.Which, in my experience, is ineffective, and indicative of a bad design to start with.
The alternative used by Mercedes-Benz was to have a switch on the center console to raise or lower the power antenna. The manual said to lower the antenna in strong signal areas.I personally installed a few of those in our cars back in the 1970s and 80s. Never needed to use the "local" setting as I never encountered any receiver overload.
I bought mine on closeout from W. Bell (remember them?) either late in 1985 or early in 1986. I know I had it by April 1986 because I took it to the Jean-Michel Jarre outdoor concert on Buffalo Bayou. That's when the lens for the LED signal-strength indicator popped out; I've been running without it since.I still have a Sony SRF-A1 that I purchased around 1984. Haven’t fired it up in many years; guess this thread will prompt me to do so. Hopefully it still works.
Not sure they were bad designs. If you look at the circuits, most Walkmen had circuitry similar to the boomboxes and clock radios of the day -- front end chip for FM, IF chip, maybe a multiplexer chip if the IF chip didn't have the FM multiplexing/stereo output integrated. Maybe one or two ceramic filters at best. And remember, on FM the Walkmen had to work off the headphone cord as the antenna, so the RF front end chip had to be fairly robust because of the vagaries of the cord's positioning while the user was jogging, working out, biking, out walking or studying, etc.
And most Walkmen users weren't FM DXers, or even cared to get FM fringe stations. They wanted the main FM's in their city or market. For those purposes, the circuitry in the Walkmen was quite adequate.