What light weight radio gets the best reception on the trail? would one that is in the form of headphones be practical or get good reception? I have a small Sony but the reception is lousy.
What light weight radio gets the best reception on the trail? would one that is in the form of headphones be practical or get good reception? I have a small Sony but the reception is lousy.
here's what i use http://www.radioshack.com/product/in...entPage=family i like them
This is what I used to check weather and listen to music/news at night:
http://www.oregoninstruments.com/pro...p?itmky=309719
The pedometer helps you gauge distances. It has a clock and headphones. It is lightweight and clips to your waist belt.
Put a couple extra batteries in your bounce box.
My reception in lower VA was great. I usually got about 10 or more stations at night. The advantage is that you usually are up high between two valleys.
Oh and it is cheap at $20.
I used a am-fm radio with a built in speaker. I never wanted my ears plug up. I always wanted to be able to hear what was going on around me. I got the same radio station [106.9 The Lite] all the way from Springer to just south of Damascus Va.
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No idea which one is BEST ...but in 2003 I carried a little "weatherproof" Radio Shack model that ran on a single AA battery. I can not remember EVER not getting at least a couple channels. That said ...the choice of channels (and the types of stuff you get to hear) may be pretty limited in certain areas, but you will generally always have some reception unless you are camped deep in a bowl.
'Slogger
The more I learn ...the more I realize I don't know.
I've used several different radios in the woods over the past 15 years. All decent. The best was a cheap Walkman that I bought some real headphones for.
Reception? While hiking, you will often pick up one channel from the east, another from the west, at or near the same frequency. As you wind along the trail they will keep changing back and forth.
While in camp, stationary, you can usually find something to listen to on FM. After dark, your choices on AM improve dramatically. Suddenly, you will hear powerhouse AM signals (50,000 watts clear usually) from places like St. Louis, Chicago, Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, Atlanta, and Boston. These are generally talk show or sports formats.
I'm still waiting for a wearable/portable Sirius satellite radio that has longer battery life. What they have now works OK on a long weekend trek but the battery dies before most thru-hikers would get to their next town stop to recharge--and even then, they'd have to have access to a recharging unit. The programming on Sirius leaves "terrestrial" radio in the dust, so I'm hoping they will get the powering issues improved. (XM isn't any better battery-wise BTW, and IMHO their programming isn't as good.)
I carried a little sony weather/fm radio w headpones the first part of a nobo hike in 05.
I don't have much problem keeping a Sirius signal in my vehicle. Rodney has Sirius in his shuttle vehicles, same story.
I have not purchased a Sirius Stiletto (wearable), so I don't know about those from first hand experience. I have seen dayhikers using them in SNP and those I've spoken to report decent results along ridgelines, not as reliable in the hollows.
i have one of these:
http://www.amazon.com/Eton-M100-Grun.../dp/B00000JMRV
while i cant speak to reception on the a.t., here in bum$&@# texas it gets all kinds of shortwave stations, in addition to reg am/fm.
i dont know if they make it anymore but there is a version similar.
U.S. Marines.
no better friend. no greater enemy.
A grundig is topnotch.
Another vote here for the Grundig. The shortwave channels are fun to fool around with. I also have a Pioneer Nano, which is an XM portable, but the reception is not great on that if you are basically at ground level in a tent or shelter.
AM is a funny animal. After nightfall, I understand that there are changes that take place in the upper atmosphere that allow AM radio waves to bounce off of the atmospheric layers and travel many times their normal range. (I used to be a camp counselor at a church camp in the Southern Tier of NY and after the sun went down, I could pick up French Canadian stations as if they were just down the road!) FM isn't affected like this.
I pick up Montreal (hometown) stations all the time around or North/Northwest of Boston all the time... nice reminder of home
I have a Grundig as well under the new name of Elan, and while mine is the larger nautical version with NOAA broadcasts instead of the shortwave, it has a great range and fine tuning close to that of dig.
UHF TV audio is a nice thing to have once in a while, I have never been a big TV fan but it serves a purpose occasionally.
As far as reception, I have never NOT been able a cacophony of stations but do not carry it with me into remote areas so I cannot say how it will perform
Not for the trail, but I'm interested in a Grundig at home. As I live in a rural area west of SNP at about 1100' elevation surrounded by the Blue Ridge, Massanutten, and other smaller mountains, I wonder how the home reception would be with just the built-in antenna? Any advice?
The one I'm considering is the G5 you can buy thru NPR (they get a commission!).
http://shop.npr.org/product/show/308...FUWoGgod52zXOA
http://www.npr.org/nprshop/downloads/G5.pdf
There is a reference to an external antenna port (antenna not included). I wonder if I'll need that given my locale? Anyone have experience that would help answer that question?
Thanks in advance...
All you need for shortwave is a long piece of wire and then you can even clip to the built in aerial. I used to have a sony icf-2010 which is a classic shortwave and I had a fancy dipole trap antenna in the attic but a 15 ft piece of wire worked about as well. Check out Universal Radio, they have a great selection. The Sangean radios are a good choice also. Some countries ( like the BBC ) have cut back their broadcasts to the US because of the internet.
Unfortunatley the small the radio the worse reception you will get. A an emergency weather radio would be something to look into. Not light weigt. But you can hand crank them. So battery use would not be a problem if you run out. And you can dial into a frequency with detail.
There a few MP3 players that do come with radios.
''Tennessee Viking'
Mountains to Sea Trail Hiker & Maintainer
Former TEHCC (AT) Maintainer
I have a small portable Coby CX 17 - AM/FM/TV/Weather Band radio that takes 2 x AA (same size as my headlight) and only weighs a few ounces (not sure how many) and seems to have pretty good reception. I'll know more once I get on the trail.