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#1
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We're looking to get a counter-top radio.
Sound quality should be excellent (to the extent feasible with this type of system), the counter footprint should be small, and the price should be reasonable. We'll mostly be listening to music, but occasionally to speech, and mostly to FM, but occasionally to AM. All the stations to which we listen are local stations with strong signals, so ability to pull in weak signals is not an issue. We're considering the Henry Kloss Model One or Model Two, but we don't know which is the better buy, or whether we should go in another direction altogether. Appearance is another consideration. The silver/white Model One would look great where we're going to put this. I don't know whether the Model Two is available with this color scheme, but I haven't seen it advertised anywhere. We'd like some advice. Please help if you can. Thanks in advance. |
#2
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In article ,
"Anthony D. Minkoff" wrote: We're looking to get a counter-top radio. Sound quality should be excellent (to the extent feasible with this type of system), the counter footprint should be small, and the price should be reasonable. We'll mostly be listening to music, but occasionally to speech, and mostly to FM, but occasionally to AM. All the stations to which we listen are local stations with strong signals, so ability to pull in weak signals is not an issue. We're considering the Henry Kloss Model One or Model Two, but we don't know which is the better buy, or whether we should go in another direction altogether. Appearance is another consideration. The silver/white Model One would look great where we're going to put this. I don't know whether the Model Two is available with this color scheme, but I haven't seen it advertised anywhere. We'd like some advice. Please help if you can. Thanks in advance. I took a look at the website and found "PAL Fashion Collection" models if you think lime or sky blue would be better. :-) The website lists the Model Two in "Silver/Black," which is great for Raiders fans. I don't see a downside to the Kloss/Tivoli: it will work, be attractive and be relatively cheap. I suppose you could look at the competition (Cambridge Soundworks, Boston Acoustics) that might give you stereo but not necessarily more enjoyable sound. You could spend more on a mini system from Denon or Panasonic, or less on a GE Superadio. Stephen |
#3
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![]() MINe 109 wrote: In article , "Anthony D. Minkoff" wrote: snip I don't see a downside to the Kloss/Tivoli: it will work, be attractive and be relatively cheap. I suppose you could look at the competition (Cambridge Soundworks, Boston Acoustics) that might give you stereo but not necessarily more enjoyable sound. You could spend more on a mini system from Denon or Panasonic, or less on a GE Superadio. Be aware GE Superadios have had horrible QA and often have distortion problems relating to FM alignment on production radios. They are easy to fix for me but I have a RF gen, a low distortion audio gen and a distortion meter and most people do not. I have also seen them with rubbing voice coils on the woofer. The Kloss or Tivoli radios are pretty good. An often surprisingly good alternative is a car radio in a small wood box with a 12 volt supply built in. Commercial "brick" switcher supplies are available or can be scrounged from dead widgets, or a toroid power transformer, a bridge rectifier moodule and a big electrolytic cap can be had for $25 or so. OEM car radios often have excellent FM sections. The last Parts Express catalog lists a Blaupunkt AM/FM/CD player with remote and MP3 CD capability for $108. I put a similar Blaupunkt in my car last year. Before mounting in the car I powered it up with an ancient Lambda bench supply and hooked it to my main stereo speakers in the listening room as an experiment. It sounded good and the FM tuner was excellent-with an improvised long random wire it got FM stations clearly that a boom box would not even notice above the noise floor. |
#4
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In article .com,
"Bret Ludwig" wrote: Be aware GE Superadios have had horrible QA and often have distortion problems relating to FM alignment on production radios. They are easy to fix for me but I have a RF gen, a low distortion audio gen and a distortion meter and most people do not. I have also seen them with rubbing voice coils on the woofer. I must be lucky with mine! Oh, well, sample of one... For folks who don't know, the Superadio has a single speaker. For the OP, it's not nearly as good looking as the Kloss. The car stereo idea is fine except for the cosmetic requirement. Stephen |
#5
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![]() MINe 109 wrote: In article .com, "Bret Ludwig" wrote: Be aware GE Superadios have had horrible QA and often have distortion problems relating to FM alignment on production radios. They are easy to fix for me but I have a RF gen, a low distortion audio gen and a distortion meter and most people do not. I have also seen them with rubbing voice coils on the woofer. I must be lucky with mine! Oh, well, sample of one... For folks who don't know, the Superadio has a single speaker. For the OP, it's not nearly as good looking as the Kloss. The car stereo idea is fine except for the cosmetic requirement. Actually it has a big speaker (the woofer) and a little speaker (the tweeter), such as they are. Bass response is limited. It is basically what they used to call generically a "transistor radio", only in bigger form and with a little better RF performance-ok, a lot better RF performance than most pocket radios. They are NOT a communications receiver, nor a hi-fi unit. Car radios are attractive when mounted in a case or box. |
#6
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In article .com,
"Bret Ludwig" wrote: MINe 109 wrote: In article .com, "Bret Ludwig" wrote: Be aware GE Superadios have had horrible QA and often have distortion problems relating to FM alignment on production radios. They are easy to fix for me but I have a RF gen, a low distortion audio gen and a distortion meter and most people do not. I have also seen them with rubbing voice coils on the woofer. I must be lucky with mine! Oh, well, sample of one... For folks who don't know, the Superadio has a single speaker. For the OP, it's not nearly as good looking as the Kloss. The car stereo idea is fine except for the cosmetic requirement. Actually it has a big speaker (the woofer) and a little speaker (the tweeter), such as they are. Arggh. Of course it does. Apologies. Bass response is limited. It is basically what they used to call generically a "transistor radio", only in bigger form and with a little better RF performance-ok, a lot better RF performance than most pocket radios. They are NOT a communications receiver, nor a hi-fi unit. Car radios are attractive when mounted in a case or box. If the OP wants to do that, happiness all around. Stephen |
#7
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In article ,
MINe 109 wrote: I took a look at the website and found "PAL Fashion Collection" models if you think lime or sky blue would be better. :-) Thanks for pointing that out. Seriously. The iPAL looks like a good possibility. It's attractive, the footprint is tiny (3.69" wide x 3.86" deep), the rechargeable battery provides a lot of flexibility for placement (it doesn't need to be near an electric outlet), and the reviews on Amazon.com rave about its sound quality. I think its winning me over. I don't see a downside to the Kloss/Tivoli: it will work, be attractive and be relatively cheap. I suppose you could look at the competition (Cambridge Soundworks, Boston Acoustics) that might give you stereo but not necessarily more enjoyable sound. I have a Boston Acoustics Receptor Radio in my bedroom, and love it. It is a candidate. Its clock and alarm features are superfluous for my purposes with the new one, so I started looking at the Henry Kloss Model One, which I expect (based on what I have read) would give me sound that is at least as good, for a lesser price, at the sacrifice of features I don't need. (By the way, the Receptor Radio is mono.) Boston Acoustics' other model, the MicroSystem CD, is $499. I'll pass. As for the Cambridge SoundWorks, it's considerably larger than the other candidates, and (based on the pictures) I don't find it very attractive. Unless its sound quality is significantly superior to the smaller, more attractive, and less expensive candidates, I think we can scratch this one from the list. The Cambridge SoundWorks and Henry Kloss Model Two both offer stereo speakers and subwoofers. (In the case of the Cambridge SoundWorks, the stereo speakers are rather close together.) How much of a difference do these make? What about the Henry Kloss Model Three? Given my requirements, is there any reason I should consider this? You could spend more on a mini system from Denon or Panasonic, or less on a GE Superadio. The Superadio seems to have little going for it other than price. It's bigger and less attractive than any of the Henry Kloss models (including the iPAL). The reviews on Amazon.com indicate that it has excellent sound quality for AM radio and talk, and that FM/music is better than one would expect for such a system, but hardly mind-blowing. Since I'm interested more in FM/music than in AM/talk, I expect I would get a better quality experience from one of the Henry Kloss models. (Note that the Superadio does, like the iPAL, have the ability to run off of batteries.) If we're going cheap, I also found the Emerson radios on Amazon. Its size and appearance resemble that of the Henry Kloss Model One so much that one would think there should be some legal issues regarding trade dress. From the reviews, the sound is nothing special, but it's quite inexpensive. I don't think I need to be that chinchy. At this point, I'm leaning towards the iPAL. Its looks, size, and ability to run "disconnected" are all appealing. Unless I can get clearly superior sound from a system whose price is within shouting distance of the iPAL's, I think this is the winner. |
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