Jo22 wrote on 2025-05-14, 17:33:Real AM radio or medium wave radio?
The people in North Amerika have that habbit to distinguish the radio bands by their modulat […]
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Real AM radio or medium wave radio?
The people in North Amerika have that habbit to distinguish the radio bands by their modulation type.
The rest of the world uses terms such as Longwave, Mediumwave and Ultra Shortwave.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longwave
Indeed we do. 😀
Well, unless you own a very old / classic radio (receiver), most radios from the last 30 or so years only have the option to receive "AM" or "FM".
Reading about it, I see only MW (medium wave) was used for AM reception in North America.
In any case, "AM" radio is pretty dead anywhere, especially where I live now - too many cheap SMPSes and LED drivers without proper EMI/RFI filtering, so it's nearly impossible to receive anything clearly. Cheap LED and CCFL bulbs are actually some of the biggest noise polluters.
Jo22 wrote on 2025-05-14, 17:33:
PS: It's not a bad idea to learn a bit about ham radio..
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amateur_radio
I had several people try to get me interested in that... but it just didn't catch my interest.
Always preferred to spend my time working on other electronics, like PCs, power supplies, and speakers / amplifiers / audio gear (but just not solely radios.)
I think the closest I got to getting interested in radio was pirate radio stations.
Then I found you can take one of those cheap car cigarette lighter plug-in FM modulators, open it up and connect a huge wire (antenna) to its output, and *BAM* - you have a much more powerful radio transmitter now. Just don't run it for too long / too regularly, or the FCC might not be too happy about it. 😉
G-X wrote on 2025-05-18, 18:25:
Oh well ... i'll wait till i get something that actually needs repairing :p.
Well, if you ever get the itch and there's nothing broken in your home, looks at your local classifieds. When I lived in the US, I used to regularly look into my local Craigslist section for broken electronics, especially if I saw listings that have been stuck for a few days or re-posted several times. Got some pretty interesting things from that. The best was my set of Sony GDM-FW900 monitors I picked back when CRTs were "not cool". One didn't power On, the other powered On but didn't work. The first just needed a few solder joints on the PSU board (G board) touched up to bring it back to life. The 2nd had its tube loose vacuum, so no fix for that one. :\
Anyways, this is how I picked up a good deal of my collectible PCs and audio gear. Most stuff (particularly with SMPS) just needed new caps. However for the ones with more complex problems, one has to get much deeper with the analysis and actively think how to isolate the problem, which is something soldering kits simply cannot teach you. Identifying problems and failures allows you to learn the mistakes (or shortcuts / penny pinching) of other designs, so you get to know what *not* to do when you make something on your own.
And lastly... fixing broken stuff tends to remove stuff from going to the landfill. Whereas soldering kits are more the other way around, as some of you noted here - once built, and if not very useful, they just tend to get chucked in the trash or sit somewhere (forever?) without use.