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In Reply to: RE: Terk indoor/outdoor FM50 Pro antenna posted by OakIris on April 11, 2014 at 06:50:04
Holly, I did not get the FM50 Pro. I bought a Britta omni-directional (non powered) Loop antenna and put it my attic. I have had good results with this one, better than the Terk AF1 by a considerable margin. I did try the Terk AM Advantage antenna. It did absolutely nothing for me so I returned it (to Amazon).
I now have a C Crane twin ferrite loopstick AM antenna. It does strenghten AM signals considerably and works to a certain extent. But signals from weak, distant stations still come in with noise, but are now stronger. I may need to have my tuner aligned.
Andy
Follow Ups:
Oh! In your previous post you said that you had ordered the FM-50 from Amazon per the reviews you had read, so I thought that was what you ended up with. lol
Thank you for the info about your experience with the Brita antenna thus far; I sure wish I had an attic, that would make things so much easier! I imagine I will eventually end up getting an outside antenna so I have added this one to my wishlist. :-)
Holly
Holly, I don't remember all the particulars, but I think I cancelled the FM-50 and went with the Britta instead.
There is a writeup on the FM-50 in the Audiocritic,, online volume 23 or 24. Peter Aczel was very enamored with it. And he is in a position to know alot about FM reception. I'm not 'dissing' the FM-50, but I decided to try an attic mounted Britta instead. The FM-50 may work very well indeed for you, mounted in your living room or elsewhere. It can also be placed in an attic, if you ever have one. Note that the Terk is directional, while the Britta is not. This was a factor in my decision. The Britta is small, and maybe you could place it in your living room.
Best,
Andy
Edits: 04/11/14
hmmm - didn't think it would work just in my living room, but that is an idea. I have pretty high ceilings too - kind of a cathedral design in the '50's ranch style house so I could put it up as high as possible....
Good point about directional vs omnidirectional; I need to make that decision too. Really, first things first - I need to find a tuner I fall in love with and then decide upon the best antenna for it in particular. I may first try just making a dipole or rhombic antenna to see if either of those will work for me instead of throwing a lot more money at antennas.
Holly
You could fall in love with the MR78 tuner that I currently have on offer with Ebay. Just a suggestion.
:^ )
My ebay ID is andyo5. It is very lovable, but I have moved in the direction of automation vs. absolute capability.
:-D I am quite sure I would love the MR 78, but my wallet would divorce me for lack of funds; I am afraid that I don't have near that amount of spare cash to spend on a tuner (or anything else, for that matter.)
I have read wonderful things about that McIntosh tuner model; I don't imagine it will remain for sale for very long, some happy and lucky radio fool will snap it right up!
Holly
I completely understand. Mac tuners are nice, but expensive. Of the few FM tuners still available in the new US market, I'd probably go with one of the NAD tuners shown on the attached link. They are both budget minded and made by a quality company. Maybe you could find a used one on Ebay.
I hadn't considered NAD - I had been concentrating on tube tuners, actually, but do have some solid state tuners on my list. I will definitely look into the NAD tuners; thank you for the suggestion!
Holly
Oh, OK. I dfid not realize that you were looking at vintage tuners.
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