lol'd
lol'd
I am a firm believer in AM stereo. I still tune into CFCO on my Denon TU-680NAB; at one time there were about 9-10 AM stereo stations day time in my part of metro Detroit.
560/630/760/990/1050/1070/1130/1340 (maybe)/1370/1600 - not to mention all the 1-A and 1-B clears at night
Jon, what station was yours in stereo (1390?)
I am not wild about are statements,while true, that sound like press releases instead of passion.
Especially in an election year
Pretending he's from metro D to get Dad cred. Gla knows no shame.
STEW BEEF!
The name of the forum is even "Tech Talk"
I am thinking of putting a second TV up in the same room as the current TV. That would require some sort of headphone set up. In my mind they are wireless over the ear and each TV has multiple separate phones (2 at least). Or perhaps a given headphone could somehow switch TV's. So I could put my phones on and toggle between each screen while the wife can do the same. Is that possible? At a reasonable price? Any advice, suggestions or recommendations?
It probably doesn't make much difference these days but I remember a discussion on one of the old boards about Car radios. Say, cars from the 80's and 90's. What radio was the best at pulling in stations. IMO, GM radios were hit and miss. On my 1989 and my 1994 Buick Century, those radios were great for factory. Nice sound, could pull in Detroit stations down in Toledo with no trouble. However, on my 96 GMC Sonoma, My Mom's 97 Jimmy, and my Dad's 87 GMC Safari van the AM radio was pretty useless. It was fine if the engine was off but when you started the car you got such bad interference, especially if you were accelerating to get up to speed. The radio on My Mom's 93 Taurus was Great as was the one on My Grandparents 91 Tempo.
What factory stock radios did you find good and which ones weren't? discuss.
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