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Grundig Yotboy yb400pe

  • Thread starter jbsarandolphmonitor
  • Start date Aug 27, 2004

jbsarandolphmonitor

Air band monitoring jbsa-randolph.

  • Aug 27, 2004

Is the Grundig Yotboy yb400pe a good radio? I am thinking about buying one. Donald Harkins  

ve3oii

Maybe ya wanna lookee here for reviews on all kinds of HF radios http://www.eham.net/reviews/products/8 73, Phil  

donhark said: Is the Grundig Yotboy yb400pe a good radio? I am thinking about buying one. Donald Harkins Click to expand...

thank you very much. I will look for a good price on one. Donald Harkins  

  • Aug 28, 2004

OR GO WITH THE KAITO 1102 FOR UNDER 100 DOLLARS GREAT RADIO CHEAP SSB RADIO!! GOOD LUCK!  

gatorhater

You could also try www.grove-ent.com . They also carry the Sangean 505p, a similar radio when compared to the Yacht Boy 400 PE.  

  • Aug 29, 2004

thanks I will check the site out. Donald Harkins  

Active Member

I don't think you can go wrong with the Yacht Boy 400PE. It's very sensitive, relatively immune to overloading, and it's a nice small package. It does a better job on most frequencies than my RS DX440, which is a pretty good radio but it's the size of a tank compared to my YB. I've seen the YB on sale for as low as $149 and it's a steal at that price.  

I have looked at other radios and I still like the yb400pe. Donald Harkins  

mrjon

  • Aug 30, 2004

I also have a YB 400 PE (have had it since last Christmas). It's a good radio with good sensitivity, and I think it was worth the money. I've lately been using it to monitor the Hurricane Watch Net (14325 kHz) for each hurricane that comes around. It performs decently on SSB but requires patience and practice using the fine tuning knob. It also has very good FM and commercial AM (mediumwave) reception. The internal AM antenna is nearly 6" long, and the telescoping FM/SW antenna is 36" long, plus you can use an external antenna (a ~20ft reel antenna is included). This is my second SW radio (my first was an analog tuning RS DX-397 that I bought a couple of years ago in college).  

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Europe's Premier Medium Wave DX Club

RECEIVER REVIEW: GRUNDIG YB500

This review was compiled independently. The Medium Wave Circle and Radio Netherlands has no financial connection with R.L. Drake, the manufacturer of this receiver.

Reviewers: Jonathan Marks, Diana Janssen, and Willem Bos.

INTRODUCTION

The Yacht Boy 500 appeared in most of the Grundig outlets in Europe in the course of October 1993. In North America the situation was different. Some of the US radio dealers we spoke initially disappointed that Grundig North America gave the exclusive distribution rights in the USA for the Yacht Boy 500 to a mail-order house called Willabee & Ward. Their toll-free number is +1 800 367 4534. In 1997 a salesman there told us the Yacht Boy 500 is still available at US$299. That does indicate though that Grundig in North America has brought some of its prices down to more closely match the competition from the Far East.

This radio was first shown at the Berlin Audio and Video Fair in 1993 and initially caused an impact on the European scene. The receiver offers coverage of FM with the Radio Data System, longwave, medium wave and continuous shortwave coverage from 1611- 30000 kHz. Unlike some of the Yacht Boy series, the 500 is double conversion.

The radio has an enormous number of functions with many of the buttons on the front of the receiver being used to do two or more things. Press a button gets you one function. Pressing and holding a button gives a different result. The display tells you what you’ve selected. We gave this radio to some visually handicapped users who reported they had difficulty setting up menus and accessing the memories without help from a sighted person. Things are not helped by a truly terrible translation of the (quite clear) German language instructions. In 1997 this had not been improved much if you want to get a quick overview of how the set works. Pressing 0 we’re told in the manual gives “passage from the ROM table to the normal memory and back again, with transfer into the tuning memory”. Reception may increase during evening and night hours due to “much more better propagation”. Nevertheless keep the instructions at arms length because unless you make frequent use of the memory and scan functions it is easy to forget the correct button sequence.

RDS FACILITY

Many stations in Europe (and a growing number in North America) now transmit a silent data code with FM signals. If the signal is strong enough the radio decodes the data and puts the name of the station on the display. The radio also knows of any alternative frequencies that many be in use and can check to see if these sound better. There are around 100 stations using RDS in the USA. During tests near Baltimore and Washington DC we noted WHFS with an RDS signal on 99.1 MHz. You can’t use the function for DXing though. Weak signals cause too many errors for any RDS decoder to function properly. We found the FM sensitivity best suited to a European environment. During our tests in Baltimore and Washington DC during November 1993, the unit we had purchased had overloading problems with nearby stations. Retracting the telescopic whip helped if you wanted to listen to stronger FM signals. The set also has a signal strength meter on FM (really designed to optimise the RDS feature) which is useful is getting the angle of the FM whip correct for maximum signal.

The radio works off 4 penlight batteries and consumes around 65 mA at normal listening levels. That’s quite economical. We got around 24 hours of listening on a fresh set of batteries. A dual-voltage mains adapter is supplied and if this is used the audio power of the amplifier is noticeably boosted.

Shortwave tuning is achieved by tapping the desired frequency onto the keypad, or moving up and down the dial in 1 kHz steps. If you hold down the TUNE buttons the steps increase to 5 kHz. This set offers SSB (but not sync detection), and comes complete with 95 major frequencies of 9 international radio stations already programmed into it. A further 40 stations can be put in the memory. A 77 mm loudspeaker gives an adequate sound for the size of the radio, and the bass response can be boosted for pleasant FM listening.

MEDIOCRE SW PERFORMANCE

The single 3.5 kHz bandwidth filter is narrower than most other portables. That gives a distinctive mellow sound to any shortwave signal. But the shape factor of the filter is only fair/poor. At night in Europe the background noise rises considerably as a result of second and third order intermodulation products. The marine band of 1.8 MHz is full of harmonics from the medium wave band. Although it may look sophisticated, the radio is only really designed for reception of the stronger international broadcasters. The Yacht Boy 206 and 207 offered much quieter results on the 49 metre band for instance, with considerably less intermodulation. We had really expected a bandwidth option for a radio in this price range (in North America the cheaper Yacht Boy 400 has this for much less). The Yacht Boy 500’s mellow audio is something you either like or hate. The audio distortion problems in early models have been solved and dealer stocks are only the new versions.

CONCLUSIONS

This is a radio with a lot of functions. If you need simple shortwave performance, we feel the extra frills on the Yacht Boy 500 may be unnecessary and too complicated to use. Once mastered, however, the data bank of pre-programmed stations is handy while travelling and FM audio is great for a radio of this size. In our opinion, shortwave performance is only fair. Results will be better in low signal areas (e.g. US Mid-West and Pacific).

This review first appeared on the Radio Netherlands website.

The SWLing Post

Shortwave listening and everything radio including reviews, broadcasting, ham radio, field operation, dxing, maker kits, travel, emergency gear, events, and more.

The SWLing Post

Georges’ review of the XHDATA D-808

grundig yacht boy 220 review

Many thanks to SWLing Post contributor, Georges (F6DFZ), who writes:

After the first information from your wonderful website, I immediately ordered the XHDATA D-808 receiver from Aliexpress for €62 including shipment to France. I got it very quickly, shipped from Amazon UK! I did a few tests on SSB. MDS is outstanding, the minimum signal from my HP generator at -127 dBm (0,1uV), is strong even on 28 MHz. Selectivity is also good, and the opposite sideband rejection is audibly also good. However I was unable to measure it because the S meter give the same indication over a few kHz around the signal of the generator. I suspect the opposite sideband rejection to be done by the DSP chip at AF, but I cannot confirm this. Reception is very good on FM, and the AF from the loudspeaker is reasonable. On headphones, it’s very good. RDS works as it should and sets the clock of the receiver. I did only a few minutes test on LW and MW, and it seemed OK, even if I don’t have a lot of experience on these bands. SW AM listening was very good; good audio, great selectivity. I suspect that the bandwidths given are AF bandwidths as even the most selective were not too much muffled. If it was IF selectivity, the AF bandwidths would have been half the values and much muffled. SSB and CW reception are also very good even if the DSP chip has a long attack time and hence gives distortion during the beginning of each message. About SSB: I think that this receiver is better than the [Tecsun] PL-880 and comparable to the PL-660. Reception is good on the short but sturdy telescopic antenna. If you connect the receiver to a large external antenna, you will encounter many IMD signals. As there is no built-in attenuator, you will need an external one. The manual is correct, but very short about the memories. ATS logs its findings into the first pages, so if you want to keep some memories, log them a few pages away. The available pages are different with bands, FM has its pages, SW its pages etc… Unfortunately, memories don’t keep the mode on SW–only the frequency and selectivity. After calling a memory, you will have to choose between AM, USB and LSB. I was totally unable to light the “Preset” label on the display ?!? Display and backlighting are very nice. Somewhat odd, but the squelch seems to work sometimes on other bands than Air band ! Ergonomics are reasonable, quality of construction is good for the price. Overall, for the price, this receiver is quite outstanding. Best regards from France . Georges F6DFZ

Thank you, Georges! Excellent thoughts on the D-808.  Your note about squelch control working outside the AIR band reflects what the Digitech AR-1780 does as well–hinting that firmware is very similar.

I fully suspect the D-808 is on the path to being one of the best radio values under $100 US.

Merci bien, Georges!

11 thoughts on “ Georges’ review of the XHDATA D-808 ”

grundig yacht boy 220 review

I also got my radio via AliExpress (for 79$, including shipping to Hungary, in July 2020). Just have just one remark to improve this radio listening: The radio has a quite big speaker (in diameter is approx 7cm), almost the maximum which can be mounted into chassis but sounds like a cheap receiver. The reason is the output capacitor. If we consider the speaker as an 8ohm resistor, with the 100uF/10V original subminiature capacitor the cutoff frequency is approx 200Hz. The used capacitor is a very cheap model with poor parameters (high dissipation factor and high ESR). I changed both of them with a 470uF/6.3V Nichicon Fine Arts type, and now the cutoff is at 42Hz, but the music on FM, especially with headphones is brave! – also via speaker is much better. Try this modification, and you will be surprised by this improvement in sound quality.

grundig yacht boy 220 review

Is the Digitech the same radio just under a different brand? I’m interested in the CB radio listening sometimes and will tune the bands to hear local traffic since my portable is more sensitive and has better DSP than my CB radio but would like to squelch the static to save battery and listening to noise during long breaks between transmissions. Do you know if the Squelch can work on shortwave on all D-808 radios or is it only some and is a firmware bug like making the Degen 1103 tune VLF and use the whip/antenna jack for it?

grundig yacht boy 220 review

I got my receiver shiped from China before they cut off United States Sales. I have many friends who really like the receiver but now ate unable to but it. Why have all the sellers refused to ship to the united states, these include Amazon UK, Ebay UK, and the orginal Chinese Seller What is going on here. Why no US sales?

grundig yacht boy 220 review

Joe, you can try to choose country of deleivery “Guam”, that is serviced by USPS, but write your actual address and zip code. It’ll be redirected to your home when it reach USPS.

From what I heard on Radio Jay Allen it is because this radio is the C Crane Skywave SSB. The supplier made agreement to only sell outside USA. They managed to get in because someone from Israel I believe shipping them in. Though now you can get them on eBay and Amazon again thankfully as well as the Alibaba/express. I just need to figure out if the squelch will work on HF so I can use for local CB and HAM HF traffic.

grundig yacht boy 220 review

I will agree with you on all findings. What I am afraid of: will this crowd out all others in the comparable portables in the race to the bottom? It’s specs are good but I don’t like gaps in the coverage (450 to 520 Khz) ,(018-118 Mhz), and the ergonomics leave a lot to be desired. Also this is a power hog. I have to recharge the battery (Lion 2000mah) on a daily basis. My pen cell radios about every week or 2. For $69 I am not dissatisfied, not about to return it if I could but not elated. Maybe this is a stepping stone to better user interface.

grundig yacht boy 220 review

Thank you Edward! I thought I was the only person on earth not thrilled with this radio. I would give it a very high grade for sensitivity (once you get around the mute on tuning) but a VERY low grade on user friendliness. Thankfully I got a $10 discount and that helped. I wouldn’t return it if I could but it’s just in the box in a drawer. There are SO many better choices out there for the money.

grundig yacht boy 220 review

This is odd. When I got mine I made a battery endurance test and it ran continuously for remarkable 32 hours, 14 of them with the backlight on. I suspect you got a faulty 18650 or something.

grundig yacht boy 220 review

The problem is not when the radio is ON, but when it is OFF (sleep mode). Mine discharges a fully charged battery completely in 3 days with the radio OFF. Terrible design and there is nothing you can do about it. Contacted the seller and they said that since I was the first to mention this problem, all they could do was to let me test one of their future products. When I asked to send the radio back for a replacement, they did not even reply. Some customer service!

BTW, in case you are wondering, I tested this with three different kinds of batteries, so I am certain the problem is not with the batteries.

grundig yacht boy 220 review

Great review, Georges. The number of portable multiband radio reviewers that use a signal generator to actually do a receiver sensitivity test is just about zero. Congratulations, my friend! I would be happy to note some exceptions to this rule if there were any. Did you terminate sig gen RF output with 50 ohms load for your test? This means a lot.

I have noticed the same selectivity issue with other radios using DSP bandwidth filtering (including Tecsun and Eton (Grundig) radios. These bandwidth settings have little effect on receiver selectivity. The outsider in modern DSP portables in this respect is the much higher priced Sangean ATS-909X. This is a Taiwan-designed radio. Sangean wisely passed on the DSP filter capability of the US Silicon Labs chip in favor of proven performance from more expensive and older-tech Japanese muRata IF ceramic filters. Kudos to them.

The two muRata filters on my 2015 909X are IF filters for 4 and 6 kHz. These two ceramic filters alone offer selectivity options far superior to the 2, 2.5, 3, 4 and 6 kHz settings on my Eton Grundig Edition Satellit (about $115 USD on eBay right now). Both radios offer additional settings for SSB. But, the DSP filters do seem to act more like AF filters on the Chinese radios which struggle with any relatively strong SW signals located 5 kHz or closer to the tuned frequency. I believe that all Chinese-designed multiband portables (including Tecsun) all suffer from the same problems because they rely on blind acceptance of the Silicon Labs DSP chip. The choice to make in Chinese radios is for better speaker sound, better internal shielding, better QC and build quality. The rest is all the same.

It is difficult to do accurate receiver sensitivity measurement due to the action of AGC. Accurate sensitivity measurements require that the receiver be operated without AGC, that is, with AGC shut off or bypassed. The high Z antenna input for most multiband portables will do quite nicely for most receiver antennas regardless of impedance.

So, yes. Choose as you will from the wide range of $100 multiband traditional portables. They are all pretty much the same Chinese-designed and built radios with a few rare exceptions.

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grundig yacht boy 220 review

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grundig yacht boy 220 review

Reviews For: Grundig Yachtboy 400

Category: receivers: general coverage, email subscription.

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Review Summary For : Grundig Yachtboy 400
Reviews: 67MSRP: 199
Description:
100 Khz - 30 Mhx portable receiver
Product is
More Info:
# last 180 days Avg. Rating last 180 days Total reviews Avg. overall rating
00673.9
Rating: 2004-12-31
So what is so good about this ?. Time Owned: 0 to 3 months.
I either got ahold of a lemon, or this radio is
grossly overated. I had asked for this at Christmas time because of all the good reviews
and the fact that it looked sharp. WRONG.
Until now, my only shortwave radios were the
Grundig S350 (which is 10X better than the Yacht Boy), a vintage Radio Shack Patrolman CB60, and a cheap COBY. For one thing, with the antenna
fully extended, it becomes top heavy and wants to sway (the antenna), and when it sways, the radio pops and crackles, it even pops and cracks
with the slightest touch of my finger on the face. The included reel antenna is of no help.
What really was the icing on the cake was when I
began noticing that there were several frequencies that my S350 was pulling in, that the
Yacht Boy didn't even hint at. After setting both units up at the same time in an upstairs room without any other electrical appliance on
and the reel antenna in place, I began compiling
a list of the stations the S350 picked up, and tried to duplicate with the Yacht Boy. I gave up after nine. I am also disappointed with the sound
quality as compared to the S350. The only redeeming quality I noticed is standard FM reception. But even at that, it is too expensive
to pass off as a portable FM radio. Of course, trying to get ahold of the technical support as listed in the manual is a joke.
So back to Amazon it goes. I only wish it had come from the local Radio Shack so as not to get burned with shipping costs and Amazon's famous re-stocking fee. Live and learn.
Rating: 2004-10-09
I love it! Time Owned: 0 to 3 months.
But I'm giving it 4 out of 5. I agree with the previous reviews I think they give a very accurate account what you are getting for your money.

I'm comparing it with the HF RX of my Yaesu VR500 scanner.

I have found the yaesu to overload very easily with a longwire but when using the longwire on the yb it has pulled in signals with little overloading. Secondly, the audio output is much clearer and LOUDER the yaesu is so quiet and required constant use of headphones. Now I can listen comfortably through a speaker!

I have found overall performance on most bands very good pulling in signals from hams in Japan, West coast, middle east with considerable ease using a long wire antenna although the whip is very effective too.

It is a bulky piece of kit with batteries but feels nice and I love that metallic look on the PE.

I know it seems difficult to compare the yb400 with the vr500 but I'm trying to put its performance into perspective and if you own a vr500 i'm sure you'll understand what I'm saying here

I feel the Grundig is a good buy
Rating: 2004-10-02
Better than I thought Time Owned: 0 to 3 months.
Picked one up on closeout at a Radio ("Rat")Shack ,not realy expecting too much out of it. A cheap radio with a bfo...why not?

Much better radio than I thought it would be.

The good stuff:
-BFO for SSB
-will tune in 1 KHz steps
-very very good sound through phones( if you have good ones)
-very good sound with built in speaker
-FM stereo through phones
-very good FM
-good AM/MW
-good SW with whip ant.
-handy reel ant.
-very good owner's manual with frequency guide for ameteur,aironautical,and maritime.
-nice case
-built very well with good quality feel to it.


Things that bug me,but not too much:
-Bass and Treble would be nice,but if not CAN'T WE AT LEAST HAVE A TONE KNOB? Not even the famed Sony 2010 has one! Why not? The hi/low switch is better than nothing,and does an ok job.
-No rf gain control.Two way dx/local switch only
-no tune knob just up and down buttons,so it's a bit of a pain to band scan.Push push push push push push push.Can tune in 1 KHz steps.
-BFO only. No usb/lsb.Tunes in 1 Khz steps with bfo "fine tune" knob.Still ok for ssb ,just could be better.
-no sync detector.Hay,what do 'ya want for $125?
-Cheezy "earbud phones". Then again, did you ever get a decent pair of headphones with anything? Not me.Spend a little and get some Koss "Porta-pro" phones.You will never go back to cheap ones again!
-dial light only stays on for 10 sec.
Don't let all of this talk you out of one though.What it does it does well....

All in all: A fine little radio esp. for the $. Quite good sound with the speaker,and very very good through phones.Good MW/Am dx( not a 2010 or RF-2200 but,still a lot better than you might think).Good with just the whip ant. for SW.Very good FM.I think it's by far the best radio you can get for the money....grab one while you can still get a new one....8)
Rating: 2004-07-30
Price...Performance...Size...Sound...All Great! Time Owned: 0 to 3 months.
The price, performance, size, and sound on this YB-400 are all great. I don't mind not having a tuning knob because the fine tuning with tuning step control work just fine for me. I find the SW performance to be quite good with the telescoping antenna, and better with the provided wire spool antenna. The size is great for all kinds of use, and the sound from this YB-400 is excellent. It's a hard act to beat for $150...
Rating: 2004-03-14
Not Strong Enough Time Owned: 0 to 3 months.
I live in a Chicago apartment, where signals are weak. The YB400PE sounds great on AM & FM, but it isn't strong enough to pull in a decent SW signal. Not only do SW signals fade, there's an unbearably loud hissing noise on weak signals. Called Grundig. They said to buy a Sony AN-LP1 active antenna. Called Universal Radio to order it. They told me that an active antenna will only exacerbate the noise -- I don't need one.

Went to eBay & bought a used Sony 7600G. What a miracle! Signals came in easily -- no problems & no hiss! Hardly ever even have to use the synch detection. If you live in a weak signal area, get a Sony. If you're in an area that gets good reception, get the YB400. The sound is MUCH richer than the Sony, and it's easier to use. I really loved the YB400, I just couldn't get a decent signal on it.

Rating: 2004-03-11
A very good portable Time Owned: more than 12 months.
This radio is my workhorse. I use it on my overseas trips due to its size and portability, customs inspectors seem to get friendlier when they see it. The reception is good on shortwave, excellent on FM, and very good on AM. The shortwave does improve with the reel antenna, very handy by hanging out the hotel window. It could use a fine tuner or a rotary knob. Some shortwave stations like Habana Cuba seem to wonder off or be off their frequency and radio can't tune them back in. Overall it delivers a punch for its size and cost and being small enough to put in a backpack or overnight bag is the icing. If I want better reception I go to my Drake R8A.
Rating: 2004-01-09
Good value Time Owned: 0 to 3 months.
My wife purchased this as a birthday gift for me,
not realizing that I already own a Sony 2010,
a Radio Shack DX-398--and not to mention the Drake
R8B, and Palstar R30CC in the shack! Her heart
was in the right place...

My main interest is in MW DXing, and I found
this to a respectable for that purpose. It is
sensitive and the filters are very good for
a stock radio. It took the Kiwa replacements to
get that kind of performance out of the 2010.

The audio is quite good, and I had no trouble
using it as a bedside radio (I like to sleep
with talk radio programs on). Not tinny or
uncomfortable to listen to at all.

But it's no DX machine either. The lack of
a sync detector, and not being able to use
an external antenna (only works on SW) hurt
it's usefulness there.

Worse is that tuning in SSB mode (ECSS) is a
disaster. I found better results using the
narrow filter and tuning off the frequency
by a khz or two. This works very well on the
crowded graveyard channels.

Good nulls on strong stations can be produced
using the internal loop antenna, allowing the
reception of weaker stations underneath.

Controls are very easy to use and there are
a few "mods" on the Internet to improve
it's performance a bit.

As many have pointed out, it probably outperforms
my Kenwood R-2000 and many other desktop
SW receivers that I owned growing up...at
bargin basement prices. But if you compare
it to the Sony 2010 or other real DX
machines, you'll be disappointed.

Accept it for what it is...a good performer at
a great price. Perfect for travelling or as
a bedside radio.



Rating: 2003-12-17
I like it Time Owned: 0 to 3 months.
Just bought this radio.I like the bigger speaker that the micro's do not have.I have no problem using the BFO.It reminds me a little of the Sangean 803 SSB set up.I can see why this radio has such a following.
Rating: 2003-12-15
SUPER ! Time Owned: more than 12 months.
Purchased refurb from universal radio and just love it sure it does not have sync detection but the price was worth it.
Rating: 2003-12-15
Close Second to Sony ICF-7600 Time Owned: 0 to 3 months.
I owned this radio for a few days, before returning it and purchasing the Sony 7600.
I am more pleased with the Sony.

Biggest shortcomings are the SSB fine tuning and the lack of synchronous AM detection. True, it has an excellent FM section---but I didn't buy the Grundig for FM. I think it could beat the 7600, if Grundig got smart and gave up the FM, altogether, instead adding synchronous detection; but that's my personal opinion. The Sony also cost me less money than did the Grundig.

In most other categories, the Grundig either meets or slightly bests the Sony---however, these margins are so slight that they are not worth sacrificing synchronous detection and spending more to get less.


Category: Receivers: General Coverage
Product: Grundig Yachtboy 400
Summary:
Rating:Time Owned:

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grundig yacht boy 100

grundig yacht boy 100

IMAGES

  1. GRUNDIG YACHT BOY 220

    grundig yacht boy 220 review

  2. Probando radio GRUNDIG YACHT BOY 220

    grundig yacht boy 220 review

  3. Yacht-Boy 220 Radio Grundig Radio-Vertrieb, RVF, Radiowerke, build

    grundig yacht boy 220 review

  4. Grundig Yacht Boy 220

    grundig yacht boy 220 review

  5. Yacht-Boy 220 Radio Grundig Radio-Vertrieb, RVF, Radiowerke, build

    grundig yacht boy 220 review

  6. Yacht-Boy 220 Radio Grundig Radio-Vertrieb, RVF, Radiowerke, build

    grundig yacht boy 220 review

VIDEO

  1. Grundig Yacht Boy 500 vs Grundig Yacht Boy 400 real test in the 40m SSB band

  2. Grundig yacht boy 300.MP4

  3. Grundig Yacht Boy 10 on LW

  4. Probando radio GRUNDIG YACHT BOY 220

  5. Grundig Yacht Boy 222

  6. Grundig Yacht Boy 1965/66

COMMENTS

  1. Yacht-Boy 220 Radio Grundig Radio-Vertrieb, RVF ...

    Yacht-Boy 220 Radio Grundig Radio-Vertrieb, RVF, Radiowerke, build 1986, 22 pictures, 11 schematics, 27 semiconductors, Germany, tubes, Broadcast Receiver. Devices. Search Schematic Finder Schematics Requested Manufacturer Countries Audio New Pictures. Components. Search Best Tube Pics New Tube Pics.

  2. Copper Talk: Short Wave Radio reviews

    The Grundig YB 400 'Yacht Boy' and YB 400 PE Review By Tech833 Introduced nearly 10 years ago, the Grundig YB 400 hit the shortwave receiver market filling a niche that did not yet truly exist. For a long time, you had full coverage large receivers and you had small feature-poor portables.

  3. My Grundig Yacht-Boy 220

    My Grundig Yacht-Boy 220 - 12 Bands - built in 1986 - works fine

  4. Reviews For: Grundig Yachtboy 400

    Time Owned: more than 12 months. I have had my Yachtboy 400 since 2003; bought refurbished from Universal Radio for $99.00. I have used this radio at home and camping, with internal and external antennas, on MW, FM and SW bands; this radio has been great. It performs well beyond the expectations of a $99.00 radio.

  5. Grundig Yotboy yb400pe

    Aug 29, 2004. #9. I don't think you can go wrong with the Yacht Boy 400PE. It's very sensitive, relatively immune to overloading, and it's a nice small package. It does a better job on most frequencies than my RS DX440, which is a pretty good radio but it's the size of a tank compared to my YB.

  6. RECEIVER REVIEW: GRUNDIG YB400

    The Yacht Boy 400 was launched at the end of 1993 in North America. In fact at £105 across Europe, the Yacht Boy 400 turns out to be a great value package. Our example is clearly made for Grundig in the Peoples' Republic of China. Grundig has designed the unit and supervised the quality control. The Yacht Boy 400 looks like many travel ...

  7. Grundig YB-220 Radio Receiver, Grundig YB220

    Grundig YB-220 LW/AM/FM/SW Radio. Discontinued! Replaced by the YB-230. Please check our Used List. Discontinued Portable Shortwave Receivers Larger View. The Grundig Yacht Boy 220 covers longwave 140-290 kHz, AM 515-630 FM bands plus it has nine shortwave bands: 3.9-4, 5.95-6.2, 7.1-7.4, 9.5-9.9, 11.65-12.05, 13.6-13.8, 15.1-15.6, 17.55-17.9 ...

  8. Reviews For: Grundig Yachtboy 400

    It's little portable that costs less than $200 and performs brilliantly in its intended use. I've owned my Grundig Yacht Boy 400 since 1996 and still use it frequently --mostly as a travelling companion. It's a darned good little radio. Its noise floor is low and selectivity and sensitivity amazingly high.

  9. Reviews For: Grundig YACHT BOY (Porsche) P 2000

    Review Summary For : Grundig YACHT BOY (Porsche) P 2000. Reviews: 14. MSRP: 99.00. Description: Sterling silver World Receiver designed by F. A. Porsche. Frequencies and SW bands can be directly keyed in. 2 international times are adjustable. 14.2 x 9.2 x 3.5 cm small and 330 g light. (without batteries).

  10. Grundig Yacht Boy 220

    Bench Therapy is live the first Saturday at 10:30 Pacific/13:30 Eastern/18:30 GMT of every month - except January.You can access the live stream directly her...

  11. RECEIVER REVIEW: GRUNDIG YB360

    The Grundig Yacht Boy 360 is slightly larger than the SW40 at 178 by 120 by 40 mm and it is heavier, 598 grams including six penlight batteries that snap into the back. The radio comes complete with a simulated leather carrying case and a book about shortwave written by Deutsche Welle's engineering department.

  12. RECEIVER REVIEW: GRUNDIG YB500

    The Yacht Boy 500 appeared in most of the Grundig outlets in Europe in the course of October 1993. In North America the situation was different. Some of the US radio dealers we spoke initially disappointed that Grundig North America gave the exclusive distribution rights in the USA for the Yacht Boy 500 to a mail-order house called Willabee & Ward.

  13. Reviews For: Grundig Yachtboy 400

    The Grundig likes 6 of them compared to the ATS-606 room for three, but the Yacht Boy has a better battery lifespan. Sound. No question the YB400 sounds better from the larger speaker, but the Sangean is much clearer because it's flat. This is more noticeable in a good pair of headphones.

  14. Grundig Radio Boy

    The first Grundig radio with a ROM table, though 3 basic versions of this set were made: The international version, with SW coverage of 1612-30000 kHz and no ROM table, the "500 Italia" with reduced coverage to meet local legislation, (SW: 3900-26100 kHz, LW 148-302 kHz.) and again, no ROM table, & the "500 Professional", sold only in Germany ...

  15. Georges' review of the XHDATA D-808

    11 thoughts on " Georges' review of the XHDATA D-808 " Istvan Mihalcz August 22, 2020 at 3:55 pm. I also got my radio via AliExpress (for 79$, including shipping to Hungary, in July 2020). Just have just one remark to improve this radio listening: The radio has a quite big speaker (in diameter is approx 7cm), almost the maximum which can be mounted into chassis but sounds like a cheap ...

  16. Reviews For: Grundig Yacht Boy 300 PE

    Review Summary For : Grundig Yacht Boy 300 PE; Reviews: 5 MSRP: $99.95 US; Description: AM/FM/SW Digital PLL receiver: Product is in production: ... Describe your experience with the Grundig Yacht Boy 300 PE and tell us why you give it the rating you did (required). Other useful information would include your experience with similar products ...

  17. grundig yacht boy 205

    Yacht-Boy 205. Grundig (Radio-Vertrieb, RVF, Radiowerke) Manufacturer / Brand; Broadcast Receiver - or past WW2 Tuner; Radiomuseum.org ID; alternative name: Grundig ...

  18. Reviews For: Grundig Yachtboy 400

    Grundig S350 (which is 10X better than the Yacht Boy), a vintage Radio Shack Patrolman CB60, and a cheap COBY. For one thing, with the antenna fully extended, it becomes top heavy and wants to sway (the antenna), and when it sways, the radio pops and crackles, it even pops and cracks with the slightest touch of my finger on the face.

  19. grundig yacht boy 100

    zum Inhalt springen; shortwaveradio.ch. Benutzer-werkzeuge, webseiten-werkzeuge. Letzte Änderungen; Medien-Manager; Inhaltsverzeichnis. Power supply, accessories ...