Interesting stuff....Thanks, guys.
I'll put the external loop antenna on my "to do" list. I've been thinking about getting one for quite a while.
Day three with my "dollar radio", and I'm not quite prepared to call it the best portable I've ever owned, but it certainly is a very good one. I didn't realize how spoiled I've gotten by digital tuning (not to mention a dial light). But, getting back into analog has been easy enough....the old "like riding a bicycle thing"
In addition to being the biggest bargain ($1) ;D, I'd have to say the SR-2 is one of the best sounding rigs I've ever owned....either via the speaker or headphones. I also was surprised to read that the SR series is notoriously "underwhelming" on FM. I live about 44 line-of-sight miles from the downtown Chicago sticks, and this is one of the few units I've owned that delivers a clear, clean signal on all of 'em without endless fiddling with the antenna. I've already talked about how the SR-2 has good AM sensitivity, selectivity, and is good at nulling strong locals. On balance, for what it can do (meaning no SW, bandwidth control, etc.) it stacks up pretty well with my Yacht Boy PE-300 and Realistic DX-75, which are overall the best that I've personally owned. Also the radio was described in the online article as known for having issue with the accuracy of the tuning dial. I guess then I'm lucky...mine's just about perfect. And as stated yesterday, all the pots are static free....pretty remarkable for a unit 25+ years old.
On the minus side, the SR-2 is a noise magnet. On FM, I like to use my Whole House FM transmitter to listen to my music library or streaming audio. When I do that, I get an annoying hum that I've not been able to completely eliminate. Admittedly the hum comes from my PC and its connection to the transmitter. But the hum is absent on other radios....including the car radio. (The hum is also not present on broadcast stations. On AM, I know I have several noise sources in the house. Air conditioner and fans, dimmer switches, TVs, computers, video game consoles, etc. Unlike my other radios, The SR-2 "hears 'em all". The ability to null certainly helps get rid of most of this....but in the process can null the station I'm trying to hear!
On the minus side,