• Reviews around station (3.25 of 5)

    Sangean PR-D18BU AM/FM/Clock Portable Digital Radio with Protective Bumper (White/Blue)

    • In my market, Rush is on a strong station, but Michael Savage is on a weaker station.
    • I listen to AM radio at night and stations come in clear, even stations that don't come in clear on other radios I own.
    • As others have mentioned, there is a continual background audio hiss, even on the stronger FM stations, as well as occasional bursts of static and distortion -- further indications of an under-designed
    • Once you get it moved just right the station stays pretty stable.
    • It's perfect for my needs, I have it on when I'm getting ready for work in the morning to listen to the traffic and weather updates and also have been listening nonstop to my favorite Christmas music station
    • Very poor on AM stations
    • so you can't get all the FM stations available to other FM users
    • That's why I have these two radios, as I live some distance from my favorite radio stations.
    • The digital selector makes finding your favorite station a breeze
    • one of the reviewers said they lost their programmed stations when switching to the adapter over batteries
    • We have an excellent student-run radio station that I thoroughly enjoy (KRVM, and they stream over the Internet if you're interested).
    • This radio has everything I wanted in a portable: small size, great sound and pre-set stations.
    • Like the red rubber exterior, the preset buttons, good reception of favorite stations, and handy size
    • It's quick and easy to "dial" my favorite stations with accuracy.
    • but when I went from battery power to electric plug, I lost my stations
    • Excellent radio..being digital it brings in weak stations without fuzz
    • I'm 20 miles from New York City and the radio provided clear reception of all available primary radio stations, including several FM college stations
    • Nice sound and sensitivity and holds the stations well.
    • Good sound, has the ability to preset your favorite stations and picks up stations easily.
    • So I ordered a real, old-fashioned radio to listen to my favorite NPR stations
    • Every station had a strong hissing/static noise underneath the music or talking.
    • Easy to program favorite stations.
    • This radio simply does not pick up stations well in my location
    • Never have a lost signal nor a local station I can't pick up
    • Another positive aspect is ability to pre-set favorite stations
    • Picks up stations pretty well and can move to get them even better because it is battery powered.
    • Easy to preset your favorite stations.
    • I wanted one that didn't have "bleed over" from other stations with my favorite station as my older one did.
    • When you do get a solid station, speaker/sound quality is still very poor and there is a constant background hiss
    • Most of the AM radios that I own have trouble with the weak station after sunset
    • It locks onto every station I’ve tried on both AM and FM even weak stations in the crowded bands of the SF Bay Area
    • It picks up AM stations very well, even the distant ones, though using my TERK antenna booster makes the reception better and cleaned up some of the static
    • There's some difficulty getting stations clearly at times, depending on the position of the radio
    • Station pre-sets and digital display make this well worth the price
    • In my market, Rush is on a strong station, but Michael Savage is on a weaker station.
    • It projects well and doesn't loose station signal
    • The speaker always has a kind of hiss to it and it doesn't lock onto a station very well even outside with the antenna extended.
    • That said, the sound is great on some stations, and just cross your finger that your favorite station is one which comes in clearly.
    • For whatever reason, my old analog radios stopped picking up some favorite stations in the area where I live
    • Maybe if the batteries had run down that would happen, but if batteries are still fine then you won't lose programmed stations by plugging in with the adapter.
    • I wanted a radio that would pick up weaker talk radio stations in my area.
    • All other stations come in crisp and the volume is great.
    • Of course the local stations are crystal clear
    • It plays like a much bigger radio and I can get WQXR classic music (FM--extending the antenna) crisp and clear, and I cannot get this station on my larger and more expensive boom box ( I live in Rockland County, some 40-50 miles from NYC), and almost all stations come in loud and clear-----both AM and FM
    • There are some weak AM stations in my metro area that most of my radios don't pick up, but this one does with no problem.
    • Nearby stations won't bleed into the one you want to hear.
    • It plays like a much bigger radio and I can get WQXR classic music (FM--extending the antenna) crisp and clear, and I cannot get this station on my larger and more expensive boom box ( I live in Rockland County, some 40-50 miles from NYC), and almost all stations come in loud and clear-----both AM and FM
    • Preset stations are easy to set, and selectivity and sensitivity are both excellent
    • Pulls in weak stations that my other ones can't
    • It could pick up our local 50,000 watt clear channel station, but that was about it
    • Too bad most radio stations have too many commercials, and real dumb talk show host.
    • have theirs clear stations doesn't fade in or
    • I needed a reliable clock radio with good sound quality that could get a fix on fugitive FM stations
    • Pretty good sound for small speaker and pulls in weaker FM stations with ease
    • I've tried a few different radios before and could only get one station well and maybe two more with fiddling a ton with tuning and the antenna, and anything out of place, even us moving around the room meant static
    • Other wise I like it.