Rating: Summary: Good AM/FM Speaker Radio With Digtal Tuning Review: I started out looking for a portable AM/FM battery powered speaker radio with digital tuning and presets. Try finding such a thing! Maybe Sangean will make one in the future. Seems the only way to get digital tuning on a portable speaker radio is to get one with shortwave capability. With that in mind, I ordered the 404. Digital tuning is what I really like for listening to AM/FM. I can change stations easily and quickly. This radio works fine for what I use it for - - casual listening to local stations. I do not listen to shortwave, so I cannot comment on shortwave reception. However, I do use the shortwave capability for setting my watch, since the time broadcast appears on 5, 10 and 15 Mhz. There are 45 digital tuning presets; 9 for AM, 18 on FM and 18 on SW. The battery life is a little disconcerting. The manual states the following: "Approx 16-20 hours of listening when used for 4 hours a day at normal volume using alkaline batteries. We would recommend for economy that ATS-404 be used via the AC adapter wherever possible with battery operation for occasional or stand-by use only" FM stereo sounded very good via headphones.
Rating: Summary: Well Engineered Radio, Good Reception => Happy Customer Review: Being an electronic product designer myself, I usually end up wishing I could offer some design change orders to the manufacturers of the gizmos I buy. However, after a month of use, I haven't come up with much that I want to change here. I did find it rather awkward to set some of the time keeping functions such as zeroing the clock to get it sync'ed with WWV, but managed to get it done. The little bells and whistles such as station memory, auto scan, dual time zones, sleep and alarm functions are the sort of thing we nerdy types appreciate. However, if you don't like programming your VCR, this radio is probably not for you. The manual is written in a far eastern interpretation of British english, and consequently, for Americans, adds something to the challenge of understanding how to work all the features. Also, the radio's designers had an odd understanding of common english parlance in referencing shortwave bands to wavelengths in meters, and carried that quirky english through the radio display design, as well as the manual. However, only HAMs and avid Shortwave listeners will likely notice that. Reception: FM sensitivity is excellent, seemingly the equal of my home stereo receiver, with excellent stereo and fidelity when listening through the included "earbuds." Those earbuds are the better quality type, too. Medium wave (AM) broadcast reception is OK. Shortwave is good. I listen routinely to BBC, Deutche Welle, Radio Switzerland and Austria, Taiwan and others, all with only the built in telescoping antenna. SW Band coverage is complete, so you can chase the BBC World Service up and down their various operating frequencies as propagation conditions vary through the day. The only significant technical weakness of the radio, and the primary reason I didn't give it 5 stars, is battery life. I use Rayovac rechargeable alkalines and get about 20 hours per charge, which is OK, but not great. If one were buying non-rechargeable AA alkalines, the battery drain would add up to about $.25 per hour, which is a bit much, I think. A simpler radio, perhaps analog rather than digital, could be expected to go quite a bit longer on a set of batteries. I think Sangean should consider including an AC adapter with the radio, given the battery life. There's a jack to plug one in, but Sangean leaves it to the customer to find an adapter elsewhere. Overall, after a month of daily use, I'm happy with the purchase. The radio met my expectations.
Rating: Summary: Excellent AM/FM reception Review: I just got this, and am very pleased. I bought it for the AM/FM reception mainly. I live in an area where reception is poor. As soon as I plugged in the ear plugs, I could hear stations normally not on around here with my walkman. Great buy, ...
Rating: Summary: Excellent AM/FM reception Review: I just got this, and am very pleased. I bought it for the AM/FM reception mainly. I live in an area where reception is poor. As soon as I plugged in the ear plugs, I could hear stations normally not on around here with my walkman. Great buy, ...
Rating: Summary: Strong A/M F/M reception Review: I was looking for a radio to bring to work with me. The am and fm stations I enjoy are adjacent to much stronger stations, and I was constantly having trouble picking up a clear signal on a conventional dial tuner radio, whether it was plug in or battery. When I got the Sangean ATS 404 digital radio, I was pleasantly surprised to hear how well it received the weaker-signal stations that I enjoy. Since I don't use the short-wave function, I can't review that aspect of the radio. The sound quality is quite good for the size of radio, the functions are easy to use after reading a poorly-written instruction manual. The main drawback with this radio is that it consumes batteries (4 AA's) rather quickly, after about 16-20 hours' worth of playing time. I've hooked it up to an adapter, but then it's not as portable. In summary, a nice radio that has provided me with easy access to previously difficult to receive am-fm stations.
Rating: Summary: A big disappointment Review: I would have given this 0 stars but that didn't appear to be an option on the Amazon.com form. After seeking through the entire SW band three different times, at different times of the day and night, all I got was BBC, and that only once, and some religious broadcasts. I would have been very happy to get stations from just Canada and Mexico, but no such luck. It's a very nice AM/FM radio with some spiffy features like a sleep timer, but my hope was to receive international broadcasts, and I am returning it because it simply did not do that.
Rating: Summary: Outstanding Fm Reception Review: if your like me and you can't stand the deluge of commercials on Top40/Classic Rock radio and live on local college radio stations;this radio is for you. all my favorite college radio stations come in crystal clear,everything from 89.1 WFDU to 91.1 WFMU and one of the long island radio(92.7 WLIR) stations my big digital receiver cant even find.the buttons are a little small,but that drawback out weighs the features. like a button located on the top of the radio that illuminates the LCD screen for 7 second.the Short wave is somwhat alright,i am told that the big city with all its electronics interfears with Sw reception.
Rating: Summary: failed miserably Review: memory feature doesn't work, sounds a loud 'chirp' constantly after one month of use.
Rating: Summary: Good but not perfect Review: The Sangean ATS 404 is a good shortwave radio, especially considering its price. I like to listen to radio when I travel abroad, and over many years have discovered that the radio I use for that purpose works well as a bed-side radio for night-time listening as well: when all the talk shows are full of conservative blather, I can switch to shortwave bands and listen to the BBC or broadcasts from Germany, France, Russia, Australia, all in English. With multiple pre-sets, this Sangean radio makes that a snap, though it was easier to use the smaller number of presets on my previous radio, a Phillips model similar to this. The Sangean looks good, although it is, as other reviews have noted, perhaps a little too complex for easy use of all the devices. It has a light so one can tune in the dark; a dual time function so one can in travelling keep both home time and local time; a very simple tone control (Music-normal-news), which is more than one expects on a radio of this price with so many other features. It has (always useful) alarm and sleep functions for falling asleep and waking up to radio. As another reviewer noted, it comes with good quality bud earphones; as almost every reviewer noted, rightly, it uses batteries like SUVs use gasoline: inefficiently, at greater than expected expense. I use an AC adapter whenever I am not travelling. So what's not to like, given that no other radio in this price range carries such a diversity of shortwave bands? Well, primarily, I don't find reception wonderful on either AM or SW bands. I'd like to use a simple shortwave antenna (known as a long wire, it costs almost nothing -- it is just a long strand of wire) and greatly improves reception. The problem? There is no antenna jack nor connection screw. So using long wires or other antennas, including cheap but useful FM dipoles, are not possible. And the Sangean ATS 404's NOT providing a connection for antenna and ground seems, to me, a great flaw. Still, it is a fine radio, with lots of potential for avid radio listeners, especially at this price.
Rating: Summary: A good value, with on flaw Review: The Sangean ATS 404 is a good shortwave radio, especially considering its price. I like to listen to radio when I travel abroad, and over many years have discovered that the radio I use for that purpose works well as a bed-side radio for night-time listening as well: when all the talk shows are full of conservative blather, I can switch to shortwave bands and listen to the BBC or broadcasts from Germany, France, Russia, Australia, all in English. With multiple pre-sets, this Sangean radio makes that a snap, though it was easier to use the smaller number of presets on my previous radio, a Phillips model similar to this. The Sangean looks good, although it is, as other reviews have noted, perhaps a little too complex for easy use of all the devices. It has a light so one can tune in the dark; a dual time function so one can in travelling keep both home time and local time; a very simple tone control (Music-normal-news), which is more than one expects on a radio of this price with so many other features. It has (always useful) alarm and sleep functions for falling asleep and waking up to radio. As another reviewer noted, it comes with good quality bud earphones; as almost every reviewer noted, rightly, it uses batteries like SUVs use gasoline: inefficiently, at greater than expected expense. I use an AC adapter whenever I am not travelling. So what's not to like, given that no other radio in this price range carries such a diversity of shortwave bands? Well, primarily, I don't find reception wonderful on either AM or SW bands. I'd like to use a simple shortwave antenna (known as a long wire, it costs almost nothing -- it is just a long strand of wire) and greatly improves reception. The problem? There is no antenna jack nor connection screw. So using long wires or other antennas, including cheap but useful FM dipoles, are not possible. And the Sangean ATS 404's NOT providing a connection for antenna and ground seems, to me, a great flaw. Still, it is a fine radio, with lots of potential for avid radio listeners, especially at this price.
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