1/24/2018
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Sony Earth Orbiter Manual 6,1/10 7392reviews
Sony Crf 5100 Earth Orbiter

Sony CRF-5100 Earth Orbiter Sony CRF-5100 I just finished work on another interesting analog portable, the Sony Earth Orbiter CRF-5100. Many companies tried their. Posts about Sony Earth-Orbiter written by Willard Smith. Sony ICF-5100 & ICF-5090 Earth Orbiter product reviews by real people like you. Only at eHam.net. - eHam.net is a Web site dedicated to ham radio (amateur radio). The Sony CRF-5100 Earth Orbiter is a solid-state, ten band receiver that covers longwave (150-400 kHz), medium wave, five shortwave bands, FM, VHF Air 108-136 MHz, and.

The Sony Earth Orbiter CRF-5100 (Source: Universal Radio) One night, when I was about six or seven, my brother put me in front of his Sony Earth Orbiter and changed my life forever. He handed me the earplug and told me that, if I was really quiet and didn’t bother him, I could hear stations from all over the world. His ploy to keep me occupied and out of his hair worked like a charm, as I was completely fascinated by what I heard. Fast forward about ten years later to 1987, when I received the best Christmas present ever: a Realistic DX-360.

I remember staying up until the wee hours of the morning listening to the BBC, Radio Havana, and many other stations. Imagine my surprise when I found Radio Australia the next morning. Radio from Australia? How was that even possible!?

Sony Earth Orbiter Crf-5090

For the next few years, that radio went with me just about everywhere, and serenaded me to sleep just about every night for years. Back then, my favorite stations included not only the BBC and Radio Australia, but also Monitor Radio and Super Power KUSW, the station that sent my my first ever QSL card. I still have it too. Drw Remover.exe.. One afternoon while I was in college, my roommate and I decided to stop into a local liquor store and do some comparative shopping. We were just about to leave when I turned around and found myself eye to eye with this beautiful old European style shortwave radio.

It turned out that one of the proprietors, a guy by the name of Howard, was a ham, and sold old used radios out of the back of the store. I got to know Howard a little, and bought several radios from him. One day while visiting his store, he shows me the most beautiful thing made of metal I’d ever seen: a Hallicrafters SX-73. Believe it or not, he sold it to me for $75! I think Howard new it was worth ten times that, but he also knew I was a young radio nerd that would give it a good home. That radio was my main receiver for many years after that, and I still have it today. My estate executors can sell it when I’m gone.

Until then, it’s a keeper. Hallicrafters SX-73 (Source: radioreprints.com) These days, my shack is an odd mix of both the old and new. I have an old r390a that was recently overhauled by Rick Mish, and a Watkins Johnson WJ-8718a that was brought back up to spec by PCS associates. If I do my part, both of these cold war relics should give me decades of service. My latest addition to the shack is an Elad FDM-S2, which is an amazing receiver! I’ve never been much of an SDR guy, but this radio might change all of that. Anyways, thanks for letting me go down memory lane.

Many thanks, Tim, for sharing your memories with us! Snagging a Hallicrafters SX-73 for $75 was, indeed, an excellent deal. Sounds to me like Howard enjoyed feeding your interest in radio. Keep that old girl in good nick and you’ll have a radio that will outlast us all. Tell your executors to put it in the casket!, and consider submitting your own! Many of you have suggested in the past that the SWLing Post join an affiliate links program. The SWLing Post now participates in two affiliate advertising programs with two large retailers that still sell shortwave radios, the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and the eBay Partnership, designed to provide a means for sites like ours to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to these retailers of radio products.

Many of our links now function as affiliate links. This means that by clicking on these links, a small percentage of the purchase price for goods you purchase from these sellers will help support our site’s running costs. We hope you understand, and are grateful for your support. But please note that we will never create a post and product link explicitly to receive a commission. Additionally, we always try to include links to other retail options if they are available, as we support and freely advertise independent ham radio retailers.

Thank you, too, for your support of these sites. Kindle Owners. SWLing Post content by SWLing.com is licensed under a. Based on a work.

The portable multi band receiver with it's horizontal dial drum and the band selector switch to operate the turret tuner at the roght small face has a quite similar external appearence to the late Zenith 'Trans Oceanic' radios. The portable receiver comes wit ha black plastic cabinet, a carrying handle and a cover, which can be flipped down and pushed in the pottom part of the receiver when it's in use (I found this cracked in several CRF-5090, I have seen.). The dimension's of the radio are 34 x 25 x 16 cm and it's weight 5,7 kg. The CRF-5090 can be powered from 110 or 220 V mains, from a car battery with 12 V DC (a special sony plug is used, the socket has two connectors for 220V AC and another two for the DC input) or from eight UM-1 mono cell batteries.