Home :: Audio :: Portable Audio :: Radios  

AM-FM
Headset Radios
Shortwave
Shower Radios
Sony ICF-SW40 World Band Receiver Radio

Sony ICF-SW40 World Band Receiver Radio

List Price: $149.99
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very happy with this radio
Review: All I wanted was a radio with good reception, no need for headphones, and preset channels so that I could listen to NPR and the Red Sox game at work. To my surprise, this was pretty difficult to find - it seemed that there was no happy medium between the lower end clock radio / walkmans and the mini boomboxes with CD players, tape recorders, etc attached to them. All I wanted was a radio that acted as nothing but a radio, but did it well.

Finally I found this item - exactly what I had in mind. I'm very happy with this product. I just wished that it had come with an AC adaptor included, instead of having to buy it separately.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Odd entry from Sony ...Not bad, nice tuner
Review: Hello folks , its Vince the radioman . I have been a collector and buff for many years and I love to do compares . This is an odd radio . Its digital with an analog feel , not really . It has a very strange display window that is supposed to act like an analog dial . I find all the window data very hard to read. The radio's good points are that it is light weight and the Sony tuner is always the best part of the Sony radio product . The sound quality is only fair both from the built in speaker and the phones. There is no external antenna jack , for this price there should have been one. I find the controls a little overly sensative and the radio seems to have a mind of its own ( changes stations sometimes at will)....but , I will say again the tuner is very good . Buy it if you get a sale only!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Very happy with this radio
Review: I've been using this receiver for a week and i find it very easy to use. I like the combination of the tuning knob and the digital readout. It's useful to have two standby modes, too. The reception is quite good for a radio this size and price. If you will be using it with an AC Adapter try to find the recommended one, otherwise you might have some noise in some frecuencies. Even if you didn't see it in the specifications in the web page, it also has a connection for headphones. Very good choice.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Good receiver, easy to use.
Review: I've been using this receiver for a week and i find it very easy to use. I like the combination of the tuning knob and the digital readout. It's useful to have two standby modes, too. The reception is quite good for a radio this size and price. If you will be using it with an AC Adapter try to find the recommended one, otherwise you might have some noise in some frecuencies. Even if you didn't see it in the specifications in the web page, it also has a connection for headphones. Very good choice.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Horrible Radio
Review: It has absolutely no front end filters. All the noise existing around penetrates it. In the result, it receives noise, not signal. Strong chugging when you try to scan with the side tuning wheel.
Strangely enough, Sony takes off production decent world band models, but keeps making this kind of overpriced trash.
It would be a barely acceptable value at $30-$40, not at its current price. Buy instead incomparably better radios from Degen/Kaito, models 1102 and 1103. 1103 has an electronic needle scale blowing away that of SW40, and it is a competently engineered and very well finished radio. Its tuning works almost as smooth as that of an analog receiver. It also costs less than a half of SW40.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Pleasant to Use SW/AM/FM Portable
Review: The Sony SW-40 is a portable shortwave receiver that gives good performance for its price range and is, best of all, truly a pleasure to use. The PLL tuning system incorporates a tuning knob, a digital readout, and an analog tuning scale to show your position on the spectrum. This makes the radio very easy and pleasant to use, whether finding stations or just "browsing" the spectrum. The preset function has 20 station presets, and is also very easy and efficient to use, as are the night light, sleep timer, and dual radio/buzzer "alarm" timers. The radio is small and light enough to be a practical travel radio. The sound, from a 2 1/2" speaker, is good quality for a radio this size and weight. The only "drawbacks" are sensitivity slightly lower than some might like (clip on an external antenna for weak stations) and a tendency for very strong local stations to interfere with reception--drawbacks only overcome by significantly higher-priced radios anyway. For its price this is a best buy and a great radio.


<< 1 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates