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The Tecsun PL-360 is a compact, portable digital PLL synthesized AM/FM/Shortwave radio featuring patented Easy Tuning Mode (ETM) for quick scanning of up to 450 station memories. Equipped with DSP technology and a high-sensitivity external AM antenna, it ensures superior reception and sound clarity. Powered by rechargeable AA batteries with USB charging, it also includes practical extras like an alarm clock, sleep timer, and thermometer, making it an ideal travel and emergency radio solution.
| Best Sellers Rank | #213,459 in Electronics ( See Top 100 in Electronics ) #351 in Portable Shortwave Radios |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 619 Reviews |
M**.
A fine travel radio
I bought this radio for my travels so that I can receive both FM and Shortwave bands. I gonna give pro and cons points: Pro: The FM reception is really sensitive and can pick up faraway FM stations that other simpler radios could not. SW reception is also good. Long distance DX is possible, I managed to get signal from Cuba in Eastern Europe with telescopic antenna. Sometimes even SSB signals are good enough to be received clearly like number stations. The signal stability is great. ETM scan feature is nice addition, that lets you quickly find the most stable signals and listen to then without manual tuning. VF scan is also good but I seldom using it. The display extras like temperature and signal strength meter works good. If you get a simple DC-IN 5V USB cable you will have chance to upgrade the rechargeable batteries from PC. The audio quality is superb.Both in speakers and earphones. The lock button works well, in fact it has never turned in himself even with the buttons unlocked. Its good when carrying radio in bag you will not turned on by accident and will not drain the batteries. Cons: Thanks to the distributors to supply additional wire antenna, however in my case it does not work, no big improvement on signal strength or background noise. Sometimes signal is even ruined with the external antenna, However, when this same antenna is used with more simpler SW radios or vintage radios its works like a charm. The MW additional coil antenna also does not gives greater MW signal. For MW reception on this radio is moderate. Don't expect the ETM of VF stations to find all broadcast signals outside there, because it can miss the weak stations. You must use manual tuning to find some weak or rare signals. Luckily the radio allows to quickly jump trough the bands and allow manual scan of selected ban. The volume knob is too archaic for such radio. In some times when holding and moving the radio in hands the volume knob can get easily turned up to load. If you use earphones its more bad for hearing in such cases when volume suddenly rapidly turns up. There is continuous reception between the bands, but because of manual frequency dial finding the needed station can be erratic. But still plausible. The bottom line is that is radio is good for traveling to other countries and remote places and have a great DX of FM and SW stations. The telescopic antenna can do wonders, if one can make that wire actually work which also too short it could be even better. Radio may seem a bit too tall for most such radios and looks like remote control, but you can take it everywhere with ease. It has great FM and SW reception and will keep you busy for long trips at bus and car or somewhere else.So its a great quality radio that can be used everywhere for radio hobby and listening. The few flaws are not that important. If you want a multi band travel radio this is your number first pick.
J**E
Lovely Design, Lovely Price
Just received my PL-360 today. Here are the first impressions after 10 hours of ownership. Build Quality - I've seen reviews criticizing the build quality of the unit. I don't see it. The unit feels substantial, the buttons have a very quality feel to them. The unit isheavy, but not uncomfortably so. The printed graphics on the unit are straight and quite legible. The volume and tuning dials do not feel cheap and give positive feedback when used. The headphone and antenna jacks are tight. The antenna is substantial and moves easily. In total, the unit seems to be well built and seems as though it will be durable. Reception and Sound - In use, I'm quite impressed with the reception and sound quality. I live in the high desert area of California and, while the bands are crowded, we are quite a distance from the cities and reception tends to be a very spotty affair. We also are on the eastern side of mountains so shortwave reception tends to be horrible. This unit is performing better than any small radio I have owned, and better than a lot of larger and much more expensive units I've seen. My other small radio (a Chinese made Grundig) receives, on a good night, 3 stations on shortwave. Without an additional antenna this unit is picking up over 25. I am getting 25 clear AM stations and 15 FM stations. I am clearly receiving AM from San Francisco and Radio Havana, two stations I've never managed to even get a hit on with previous radios. The external AM antenna makes a tremendous difference in AM reception. The ETM function (Tecsun's proprietary "Easy Tune Mode") works extremely well. It scans the band and pulls out the frequencies where it finds stations and allows one to scan through without manually hitting all the frequencies. A very nice feature. The speaker sounds fine, I agree with other reviews that it is a bit tinny for music but is fine for AM talk radio and shortwave, which are the two primary uses I will have for it. What's In The Box? - The unit comes with an external clip style antenna, a set of ear buds and a nice padded case. A couple of caveats - After spending some time with the unit I must say that the one weak point seems to be the connection point for the external AM antenna. I believe that any solid blow or one drop could very easily cause either the female connector to break within the unit or the male connector to shear off. Something to be aware of, and careful about. The other fault is with the belt clip, which is a nice feature but seems flimsy and poorly made in comparison with the rest of the unit. I don't trust it and have removed it from the unit completely. A small issue, but one which is inexcusable in such an otherwise well-made product. This is compensated by the case, which has a nice two way belt loop. Would be nice if the case had a storage area for the MW antenna and external SW antenna, but that is just nitpicking. I purchased the PL-360 to use at my job. I work in a very solid building with quite a bit of steel in the construction and a lot of fluorescent lighting. My previous small radio had massive amounts of interference from the lights. I am very eager to try the Tecsun and see how well it performs. I will post an update when I've given it a thorough test. Other than the small issues above I am very happy with the PL-360 and wouldn't hesitate to recommend it. UPDATE: Wanted to add in some other thoughts after a few more days with the PL-360. This thing isn't just easy on batteries, this thing SIPS batteries! I've had the same three standard alkaline batteries in this radio through over 40 hours of listening and the battery display JUST dropped by 1/4. Amazing. And having now used it several nights at my job I am very impressed with the AM reception. Only in the very center of the building do I have an issue with reception, but even there it's still listenable, just a bit noisy. BUY IT!!!
R**R
Exactly two outstanding features on this radio: scanning and selectivity
This is really a "3 star" radio, performance-wise. Considering price and the above strengths, it gains at least one star. It's doubtful you can do any better for $50. Before going on in detail, an important word about shortwave radios in North America. Signals are often only available an hour or two a day, and the signals are often weak. It's important to recognize what is possible and form realistic expectations of what -- and when -- you can hear programming from afar. A good analogy is listening to FM is like going to the store and buying a fish. It's just there waiting for you any time you want one. Listening to shortwave is more like learning when the best time is to fish, and being there at the right time and patiently waiting for the fish to bite. Sometimes you will go home empty-handed. Conditions can vary from day to day, even hour to hour. I listen to Radio Australia overnights on 9580 Khz and 11880 Khz in the mornings, and it's great. 4-7am local is the best time to hear lots of signals at my location on the west coast. Your best times may vary. Also, spending a lot more money on a shortwave receiver will not necessarily result in major improvements in reception, because often background noise is the biggest limitation to the ability to hear signals. In almost every case, a better antenna will do far more good than a better radio. OK, setting realistic expectations that shortwave is often a fishing game: There are exactly two outstanding characteristics of this radio, both due to its DSP Si4734 heart: 1) outstanding selectivity typical of a much more expensive radio, and 2) scanning performance you can't even find at any price in other radios. The second benefit is testament to a good implementation of the DSP's ability to report actual signal to noise ratio rather than just signal strength -- something relatively new to SWL radios. Then there are the shortcomings typical of a small and cheap radio: sound and volume are OK but not great, there's no room for a proper direct-entry keypad, and (probably my radio is proof of this) quality control may be lacking. I've been an SWL on and off for close to 30 years and have owned and used dozens of shortwave radios (Drake R8, Sony SW7600G, Grunding YB400, Sony SW7600G, and others). For this reason, I'm going to focus primarily on shortwave performance, secondarily on AM/BCB/MW performance, and only lightly on FM. (FM was disappointing.) Keep in mind that shortwave is a weak-signal game for many in the USA, as there are no stations inside the US worth listening to, and few international broadcasters "target" the US anymore, so the "salad days" of many booming signals carrying fascinating programming (and fascinating propaganda too!) are largely behind us. This means your best bet is using this for travel or catching regional signals or international signals generally meant to be received elsewhere -- thus having a good antenna and an electrically quiet listening location is very helpful to maximize your enjoyment of the hobby. However, that said, on the West Coast of US Asia/Pacific stations can often be quite strong from the wee hours onward. Some cool frequencies to try are 11880, 9580, 11725, 9595 || 3925, 5025, 5040, 6000. Also check out short-wave.info for further information! Pros: Sensitivity is good, selectivity is excellent, and sound is louder and less thin than you'd expect from such a small radio. There is no meaningful bass, however. The tuning features are frankly outstanding, with ETM being a stand-out as convenient for SW at different times of day, and for FM and AM when you travel. I instantly took a liking to this useful feature. The memory system also works well and there are more memories than I can imagine ever using. But what really stands out is its "best-in-class" scanning performance on shortwave (and AM). What's special is both manual and automatic scanning tend to find *actual broadcast signals* rather than continually stopping on noise peaks. Most shortwave radios (at any price) have great difficulty distinguishing between an actual signal and a local noise peak, and end up stopping on a lot of junk signals that amount to nothing more than being louder noise than the frequencies on either side. To be able to push the "ETM" button or "VF" and find actual, even quite weak signals in a couple minutes without finding tons of spurious junk is just astonishing to me and apparently takes advantage of capabilities of the Si4734 DSP chip -- being able to compute signal to noise ratio -- that simply aren't feasible with traditional squelch-driven scanning. Welcome to a new Jeopardy category: "things you can do in DSP for $3 you can't do with analog circuitry for any reasonable price, Alex". The supplied external antenna, taken outdoors, really helped boost marginal signals to good readability. I am surprised and impressed the radio showed no signs of overloading and almost no broadcast band breakthrough - just one spot on 3rd harmonic of nearby 50kW AM station was heard, and it was not very strong. Cheap radios often come to pieces when you put any sort of real antenna on them, so this is another pleasant surprise. Again, it won't win any awards for dynamic range, but it's better than many inexpensive radios I've tried. As an aside, the AM antenna jack appears to go to the same input as the SW whip does, so you CAN attach an external SWL antenna with a mono jack into the AM in. However, according to the drawing in my manual there is a low-pass filter between the whip and the IC input that you will be bypass by jacking into the AM socket, so overload may be more likely. Then again, it might be fine depending on the particulars, so I'd say experimenting is worthwhile. UPDATE: Connecting both ends of a 25 foot wire to the jack in a loop configuration caused TERRIBLE overloading. 36 spurious signals going all the way into the 7 Mhz region. So, a big antenna should not go on this radio through the AM jack. It's still OK for 25 feet of wire to the tip connector though. Cons: Cons are various and mostly minor to me. The tuning dial mutes. This is annoying as it destroys the fun of "tuning the dial" to discover new signals, because you have to step and stop constantly. Even the ancient Sony SW7600G can do this well (via holding the "slow tune" button down and disengaging the sync detector). Not sure if this is a shortcoming of the DSP chip or second-rate audio design. In "VF" mode, tuning can take a while as you can only move at two speeds: 1 Khz and 5 Khz per dial "click". That's a lot of"clicks" to go from one end of a band to the other, though you can jump between bands with the SW up and down arrows to help out. This problem is inherent to having no numeric keypad and follows from the radio's small size, so it's just a trade-off you make in an ultra-light radio. If Tecsun wants to make a more excellent radio, making the firmware detect when the dial is going above say 7 clicks per second, to go to a 100Khz step to speed across bands. That would make the radio a LOT nicer to use. :) The goofy outboard AM antenna on top did not appear to be significantly better than the built-in one. Swiveling the radio for maximum signal or mimimum noise on built-in, and moving the outboard antenna through 360 degrees in the horizontal plane, I could neither hear nor see on the S/N and signal meter any substantial difference between them. No idea if this is a manufacturing defect in mine, a problem with my test method, or it's just a cute gimmick. But I will be leaving mine at home because I'm not convinced it does anything very useful. That said, I could see doing some casual DXing on the AM band with this radio in either configuration. I deducted one star because of a potentially fatal fault for some. It would be a deal-killer if I bought the radio primarily for FM stereo listening. There is a weak but continuous high frequency hiss on the headphones even with a full-quieting FM signal with the volume cranked all the way to zero. It's dead quiet through the speaker but very noticeable on headphones. Turning the volume up high to mask it is not an option as I would like to preserve my hearing. :) I suspect this may be an example of poor quality control rather than a design defect. At least I hope so. Please feel free to comment if you have similar problems (or definitely don't.) I'd be happier to discover this isn't a "feature" of this design. So in summary: 1. Amazing value for money - five stars for value 2. Buy it if convenient tuning features and great scanning are important to you. These are winners. 3. Pretty decent shortwave - three stars (not considering price) 4. Audio is good - surprisingly so for its size and price. But see #5: 5. Headphone audio hiss - ignorable for AM and SWL, but this radio misses the target as the one travel radio to take everywhere if you can't enjoy FM stereo. Again hopefully this is a production defect and not a problem with all of these units. 6. External AM antenna seems to be more gimmick than useful from my testing. On the bright side, you CAN feed SWL wire to the tip connector and avoid "clip-on" so long as it's not too long a wire, so maybe Tecsun would do better to re-label the connector "external SWL" antenna and put the filter in line there. It would arguably be more useful. 7. It's a steal. Better to spend $50 or so and discover SWL is not for you than start with a high-end radio that can't do a lot more, and be out $250 or more. I think it's a great starter radio and also a good candidate to take on the road with you wherever you go.
T**R
One of the better AM/FM/SW radios of its size/price
I bought this Tecsun PL-360 radio back in 2013 from Amazon as an impulse buy. I liked the compact size, scanner configuration, shortwave coverage, and the neat little AM loopstick antenna, and I still do. This radio receives AM, FM and SW broadcasts remarkably well considering its size and cost. AM is the radio's strong point, I think. I've gotten AM broadcasts at over 1,000 miles from the transmitter using the optional plug-in loopstick that comes with the radio. One other useful attribute of that plug-in loopstick: when attached to the PL-360, you can use the radio on AM band to locate EMI noise in your house On shortwave and FM, you are limited to using the whip antenna, either by itself or in conjunction with the included clip-on wire antenna, since there is no SW or FM external antenna jack. Despite this, I was still able to hear SW broadcasts from Europe at night. Newer radios such as the XHData D-808 clearly beat out the PL-360 on both SW and AM reception, but it's not a deaf receiver by any means, and clearly superior to all the Degen/Kaito radios I have tried. Those who complain the PL-360's reception is inferior to their $200 lunchbox-size portable are being a bit ridiculous IMHO. As to reliability, mine's functioned flawlessly for ten years. Modern mass production quality is very hit-or-miss, so I don't discount the one-star reviews from folks who received a radio with poorly soldered joints or broken wires. So I'll just say that if you get one that has been properly assembled, the PL-360 is a very reliable radio.
E**E
`Tecsun PL-360 – A Love / Hate relationship
I bought the Tecsun PL-360 a little over a year ago on a whim when Amazon first started offering them. Having owned several communications transceivers with DSP I wanted to see how well it was implemented in a small shortwave receiver, and the price of less than $40 didn’t seem to be much of a hit to my wallet. I was intrigued by the funky elongated design and external removable ferrite antenna; it would definitely be a first of its kind in my collection of many radios. That’s where the love began and I anticipated its arrival. Once unboxed and in my greedy hands, I marveled at its unique shape – It feels like a slightly oversized television remote. Build quality feels OK but not great, a little on the “cheap” side. I tossed in some freshly charged NiMH batteries and powered it on, FM was the default and I dialed around. Sensitivity and selectivity seemed good and using just the telescopic whip I could pick up one of the low power college stations almost 50 miles away. This was a good sign being that I live in a rural area surrounded by tall trees and hills. I switched to the SW band and did a quick scan using the convenient ETM function. This is a very nice feature, no wonder Tecsun is working on a patent for it, it makes finding listenable stations on every band easy as pie. Once finished I turned the tuning thumbwheel and there was about 35 listening choices on SW, some signals better than others but this was to be expected. Immediately I noticed what I thought to be an anomaly, stations that were marginal and fading were going up and down in volume, kind of like turning a light off and on with no smooth fade transition. I ignored it and went directly to MW since this was going to be primarily used for MW Dxing, or so I thought. I plugged in the external ferrite antenna and decided to manually dial around and get a better feel of the radios sensitivity and selectivity on this band. I started around 530 kHz and once reaching 570 – BAM! there was a station about 100+ miles away coming in fairly clear and listenable. I thought to myself “This is good, but something doesn’t seem right. Why did the volume jump up again so abruptly when receiving the signal and then down again when tuning off?” This was the beginning of the hate fest, and investigation into the Silicon Labs si4734 DSP chip function most notably dubbed as “soft mute”. Soft mute is the way the DSP chip handles unwanted noise and interference once it reaches a predetermined threshold. If you receive a strong or fairly strong signal it locks on and the DSP kicks in full steam. If the signal is marginal, fading or equal to the rejected noise, the volume is reduced or “muted”. In my world this is unacceptable and takes all the fun out of dialing around and DXing. After all, any cheap AM/FM/SW radio can receive strong signals, why make DSP technology a hindrance to the hobby? Rather than bash the PL-360 I’m sure this behavior is a firmware or chip programming issue because it’s barely noticeable in my PL-380. Tecsun? Are you listening to us yet? For most of the year I more or less ignored the PL-360 due to the soft mute and listening fatigue attributed to it. The other day I had some time to waste and I fired up the PL-360 to remind myself of how much I hate it. While dialing around on MW I noticed that if I stay one kHz off the main frequency listening is quite tolerable and soft mute is virtually disabled even when signals fade, yet the DSP function still remains. OK, maybe this isn’t so bad after all? Quirky but workable. Since the PL-360 has an external ferrite bar antenna and jack, I tried plugging in my Radio Shack loop (this is almost identical to the Kaito AN-100). I normally couple this to my radios passively but wanted to see if it would overload the PL-360. I tuned to some very low power Department of Transportation Traveler broadcasts on 1630 and 1650 kHz (1631 and 1651 actually, we no likey soft mute), tweaked the loop to frequency and there they were coming in just as strong if not better than on my Sangean PRD-5. Not bad at all for such a small and cheap radio. To summarize: I have a new found appreciation for the PL-360 even with all its quirks (I’m sure my wife feels the same about me). I’m disappointed that I can’t use it “as is” and what most of us expect as normal function out of the box. I like the size and features, sensitivity and selectivity is above average, MW antenna jack turned out to be a real plus in my situation. I was hoping and intending to use the PL-360 as a MW DX “Ultralight” with some casual SW listening thrown in. But it seems better suited paired up with my external loop, which isn’t easy to fit in a pocket.
1**E
Great little radio!
I ordered this radio so I could have a good emergency radio. The characteristics I was looking for were: Compact, lightweight, coverage of FM/AM/Shortwave, and easy to use. I'll touch first on what you want a radio to do, which is be a radio. My favorite feature of this radio, especially on shortwave is the ETM button. The ETM feature allows you to scan the whole band (or multiple bands on SW) for stations that are coming through. This is especially useful for shortwave since the content you can receive varies greatly based on time of day, and solar conditions. So before I sit down to start listening I just perform an ETM scan of the shortwave band (give it about 2 minutes to complete the scan, you can watch what freq it's on with the display), and then I can just dial through the handful of stations I am receiving instead of tuning around endlessly looking for something. this feature isn't as needed for FM and AM since the stations you listen to in your area are pretty much always there. Great for travel, though. It seems sensitive enough. I like the fact that it actually displays the signal strength and signal to noise ratio on the screen so you can adjust the position of the radio, or your antenna as needed to really lock in to the signal. Also, having a digital display is a huge advantage in SW so you know exactly where you are in the band instead of guessing more or less. The included external AM antenna works great, but generally I can pick the signal up by just rotating the radio around a bit until it sounds clear. But since AM reception is highly directional having the external antenna on in the headphone style jack is nice so you can just twist that around instead of your whole radio. I was also pleasantly surprised to see that hitting the display button rotated through several options including the temperature, which as near as I can tell is accurate. As other reviewers have stated, it's about the size of a TV remote which makes it very easy to stow away in a small compartment in any of my backpacks, or a magazine pouch on a vest. It's not heavy, but it's not so light that it feels flimsy. I haven't tried throwing it against any walls, but it doesn't feel like it's going to come apart in my hands. On the note of its physical build, there's one thing about it that I really like that I hadn't thought of before ordering it. The expandable whip antenna is housed inside the radio. So if you have the antenna pushed all the way in to the unit, it's not going to catch on things and get torqued off while stowed away with other gear. One downside to this is that it doesn't rotate but I haven't really found the need to gripe about that in practical application. I've had the radio for a little over a week now, and I'm still on the same 3 AA rechargeable batteries that I put it in when it arrived, and the battery gauge is still showing full. I use it for a couple of hours daily. The only two cons I can come up with are: It uses 3 batteries, which makes it odd for using batteries that you recharge in pairs or fours since you don't want to mix weak batteries with full batteries, and you can't directly enter a frequency. This is only slightly painful on shortwave, but you can use the band up and down buttons to get you within thumbwheel scrolling distance. I also wish it had SSB receive capability, but for its size and price I couldn't expect it. All in all, this is a great radio that does everything I want it to do! You'll get to hear plenty of distant shortwave stations with the included clip on antenna, or you can do yourself a favor and get an alligator clip and a spool of magnet wire to run outside (but not too much, or you'll overload it.) Have fun!
L**E
THUMBWHEEL Tuning of PRESETs
Well I thought radio was a mature technology with few surprises left. These Tecsun portables have new features which now seem indispensable. Well made hardware & firmware. THUMBWHEEL TUNING between PRESET Stations - very convenient - Quickly scan dozens of your presets SIGNAL STRENGTH Meter: signal-power @ antenna, measured in dBµV (i.e. relative to a signal of 1 microvolt) SIGNAL/NOISE Meter: measured in dB FOUR Different TUNING MODES: ETM, ABS, ABM(with ATS), & Manual AM ANTENNA: plug-in ferrite-bar antenna boosts AM signals by 30dB -- signal-power is increased 1000x. Allows you to adjust the antenna direction without moving the radio. LONG-WAVE Option: the AM/MW band can be extended down to 150 kHz to include long-wave signals Good RECEPTION and CRISP SOUND quality - clarity - projection - great for talk radio. Makes spoken word easy to understand. Music also sounds good. Great for outdoors - crisp audio cuts through background noise like wind or traffic. Would be nice if it had a wrist-strap Good QUALITY CONTROL: we did a side-by-side of two PL-360 units - same performance - same meter readings - everything RE-CHARGEABLE: mini-USB connector, 5-volt input to recharge Ni-MH batteries. Nice feature - System Settings adjust the battery-indicator for Ni-MH voltages. Can re-charge from any computer USB port. USB Cable to Recharge the PL-360 EASY on BATTERIES: goes a long way between re-charge. Works well with Eneloop Ni-MH Rechargeable AA Batteries Comparison with Model PL-380 - __ similar performance & meter readings - the PL-380 does a few dB better with FM/SW bands - the PL-360 does a few dB better with AM/MW/LW bands. This makes sense comparing the antennæ. __ PL-360 has smaller speaker - diameter 40mm __ PL-380 does NOT have a Jack for external antenna 450 Total PRESET Memories: __ 100 AM/MW/LW __ 250 SW __ 100 FM WEIGHT: 6.95 ounces - (with batteries) DIMENSIONS: 6.1 x 1.9 x 0.85 inches ANTENNÆ - __ AM/MW/LW ferrite-bar Antenna: 2.6 inches, 1.15 ounces __ AM/MW/LW: has 3.5mm Jack for External Antenna __ FM/SW Antenna: extends to 18 inches __ optional: Tecsun AN-200 AM Antenna - this tunable loop antenna can boost AM signal-strength as much as 40dB *above* the ferrite-bar antenna included with the PL-360. Typical signal boost ranges from 10dB to 30dB using this loop antenna. DOCUMENTATION: 22-page Operation Manual - well illustrated. Sometimes mangled English but overall very useful CARRY CASE: includes nice case - neoprene/leather combo, belt-loop, & belt-clip
S**R
Some Handy Tips for Operation
It's amazing what they have crammed into a tiny radio for a mere $50. Sure, it's not an Icom IC-R75, but then you can't put the Icom in your pocket, either. This radio will pick up your favorite crackpot broadcasting on short wave. My favorite is James McCanney, with the Science Hour on WWCR. This guy is the world's foremost authority on everything! 1. If you put in a set of batteries, and the radio seems to be non-working, remove and replace the batteries. I don't mean to put in a different set of batteries. Just take them out and put them back in. 2. Check every setting, in particular the 9 kHz/10 kHz setting for AM station spacing. It tends to come up set on 9 kHz, which is wrong for the USA. 3. Pay attention to the display showing signal strength at the antenna on the left, and signal to noise ratio on the right. 4. As with all short wave radios, the bigger your antenna is, and the higher up in the air it is, the better your reception will be. 5. If you use rechargeable batteries, there's a setting to tell the radio about that. It will charge them up internally from a USB power supply. 6. The speaker is tiny, and not really for listening to music with. (It's not a Tivoli Model One either.) It's suitable for short wave, which isn't exactly high quality audio to begin with. It's fine for voice, if a little peaky at the high end. 7. The ETM tuning mode is really handy. It saves you a lot of searching for available short wave (and AM/FM) stations, the radio looks for them and saves them for you in a temporary memory, so they don't get written in stone into your saved stations. 8. My strongest AM station here is at 1170 kHz. It can be received on the Tecsun at double the frequency, 2340 kHz. So, it's not perfect. Highly recommended! It's a great little toy for the price.
P**N
Sturdy pocket sized portable MW,SW,FM receiver with facility to attach external antenna for AM and SW.
I've only recently purchased the Tecsun DSP PL-360 receiver but it seems to give good performance across all wave bands. Handheld, sturdy, with several very useful easy to use functions - memory, alarm, auto-scan etc.. The display includes time, temperature and so forth. It has FM, MW, SW. The telescopic antenna gives good reception for FM but the included additional clip-on (to the integral telescopic antenna) wire antenna is needed for SW, at least in my location. As is the included 'T' plug-in AM antenna. Also included is a set of small earpiece headphones. The only weird thing is the text on the packaging is in what appears to be either Japanese or Chinese, not sure which but the handbook is in English.
P**D
Amazing what this radio can do!!! - Do not forget to read the Instruction Manual.
Well, what shall I say? I have my HAM radio license and I am used to highly expensive professional radio transceivers and receivers. I am also a little bit of a radio addict and a lover of radio receivers of all kinds. I came across this PL-360 that is also available under other trades names and in the USA under Government Equipment available and for sure of different sales prices. I ordered this item at Amazon and was disappointed about the performance when I received it. It was my fault as always, radio amateurs think that they know it all. Wrong! Without reading the instruction manual you will be stranded in no time. This is not the old fashioned, as usual, tuning knob device as this is more the latest Easy Tuning Mode facility as used by very expensive Icom IC705 SDR (Software Defined Radio) computer radios. Tuning was easy if you follow the manual. - The sound is out of this world compared to the dimensions of the radio as well the price. If you use the supplied two different antennae you will find an open world of Short Wave Radio. It is beyond belief what you have in your hands. I used a professional antenna system and I was surprised what I got. It was not less than my highly expensive broadcasting Short Wave receivers. I missed the SSB facility, but then that is not of interest for the normal mortal. This radio is one of the few essentials for any kind of emergency that occurs frequently in Australia, fires, water, storms, and other unpleasantnesses that mother Nature has to offer frequently. This radio is small and can go everywhere and will inform you what is on and what is not. At least you are informed of what is happening around you. In these uncertain times, it is good to be and keep informed. One never knows what is next happening. The mobile phone maybe not working, out of power, or prevented to connect to the service provider. MW and SW are always working somehow and you are informed. My advise: This radio is not a luxury, nor a toy but a necessity and the price is just perfect.
M**R
Great Product
Better than expected. Controls and auto save functions are amazing. Easy to operate. Signal capabilities could have been better.
F**A
Buen radio
Justo lo que esperaba ,buena recepcion de estaciones ,buena portabilidad para viajes o actividades al aire libre
R**D
Has a mind of its own
Seams to have a mind of its own, turns on by its self, for some reason, most stations l get are gospel from the states,need to read the manual a few times to understand it.
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