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Thread: Eton Radios

  1. #1
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    Eton Radios

    Anyone have any experience with these?

    This model looks very promising (Eton FR1000):

    http://www.etoncorp.com/product_card...uctDbId=321378

    It might be good as a base station for the Garmin Rinos I already have.

    This also looks good (Eton Scorpion):

    http://www.etoncorp.com/product_card...ctDbId=1517029

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    Thumbs up FR500 Solarlink

    Yes, I bought one. I have the Eton FR500 Solarlink. It runs on internal re chargeable batteries, Alkaline AA, Wall plug, hand crank, or Solar power. It has a digital screen.

    It is a good is a good piece of kit, for a disaster.
    Last edited by Cold Zero; 04-23-10 at 07:39.
    Cold Zero

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    Poor reception is the biggest complaint with it.

    http://www.google.com/products/catal...wAg&os=reviews
    ParadigmSRP.com

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    Great, the Pocket Fisherman of radios - does everything well except pick up radio signals.

    I wonder if this has to do with the stubby antenna?

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    Question

    I am currently looking for a weather/emergency/crank and solar powered radio. I have been doing a lot of reading on REI, Amazon, and even Youtube. Midlands, Eton/Grundig, etc all have very mixed reviews.

    I really am at a stale mate as to which radio to purchase. I will more than likey be buying at least two when ever I find one.

    Any recommendations?

    I find a lot of emergency radio owners have never even taken the damn things out of the box to ensure they work on all said power sources.
    "In a nut shell, if it ever goes to Civil War, I'm afraid I'll be in the middle 70%, shooting at both sides" — 26 Inf


    "We have to stop demonizing people and realize the biggest terror threat in this country is white men, most of them radicalized to the right, and we have to start doing something about them." — CNN's Don Lemon 10/30/18

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Iraq Ninja View Post
    Poor reception is the biggest complaint with it.

    http://www.google.com/products/catal...wAg&os=reviews
    Yup. I just tested a Grundig/Eton Satellit 750 pretty extensively, thinking it would make a nice receiver for someone not wanting to put a LOT of money into radio equipment. It receives SSB in the HF bands, as well as the AM civilian aircraft bands (118-136mHz), which is unusual in a radio of that price range. It offers direct frequency entry, a true analog S meter, and 200+ memories, along with a clock and dual alarm function. Sounds like a winner, right?

    The good news: It works fine as a regular AM/FM radio. The aircraft bands work pretty well too. I'm dubious of the utility of an air-band receiver for a radio like this, but it does work ok.

    The bad: It is deaf as a post in the HF bands. Even with a 200' long wire connected to its external antenna input, even with my HF dipole connected to its 50 ohm input. It would occasionally pick up WWV on 15 mHz in the middle of the day, and 10 mHz in the afternoon, but the signal was weak and barely readable. Switching the antenna to my Yaesu FT897, WWV would boom in at S9+10 on 15 mHz. The Satellit would occasionally pick up CRI out of Beijing if the stars were aligned just right, but again it was weak (S2-S3), and switching the same antenna to my Yaesu again made the signal S8-S9.

    It worked fine on the AM/FM broadcast bands, but you don't need a $250 radio to do that. I was convinced before that you need something like an Icom R75 if you actually want to hear anything, and I'm even more convinced now.

    Couple this with Eton's world famous shit customer service, and I'd say don't waste money on the stuff, unless you can pick one up cheap and only expect it to pick up local AM/FM broadcast.

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    It is coming up on hurricane season and I too am in need of a decent emergency radio. I had been looking pretty hard at the various Eton models.

    For me this would be more of a back up back up. I have access to a 1w handheld, 5w mobile, and a 100w base station VHF radio through work. All within about 50' or so of my home. I figure the handheld and mobil unit will work fine if the power go's out. However if I have to work both of those are usually with me. I wanted something simple and reliable for the Mrs. to have to monitor weather and news updates at at home.

    I like the idea of the multi power source for the Eton radios (AC, solar, crank, battery what more can you ask for?!?), the AM/FM, NOAA, and Short-wave features are great. The flashlight, cell phone charger, siren, etc. seem like more like showy crap to me.

    Any other recommendations for a radio w/ those features?

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by RiggerGod View Post
    I like the idea of the multi power source for the Eton radios (AC, solar, crank, battery what more can you ask for?!?), the AM/FM, NOAA, and Short-wave features are great. The flashlight, cell phone charger, siren, etc. seem like more like showy crap to me.

    Any other recommendations for a radio w/ those features?
    I to like the idea of solar panels and a hand crank. I don't need a clock, LED light, or a cell phone charger as those power vampires I don't need for the intended purpose.

    I'm looking at the Kaito Voyager All-Purpose Emergency Radio KA500but then again I read A LOT of mixed reviews on it.

    http://www.radiolabs.com/products/ra...ager-radio.php
    "In a nut shell, if it ever goes to Civil War, I'm afraid I'll be in the middle 70%, shooting at both sides" — 26 Inf


    "We have to stop demonizing people and realize the biggest terror threat in this country is white men, most of them radicalized to the right, and we have to start doing something about them." — CNN's Don Lemon 10/30/18

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by RiggerGod View Post
    It is coming up on hurricane season and I too am in need of a decent emergency radio. I had been looking pretty hard at the various Eton models.

    For me this would be more of a back up back up. I have access to a 1w handheld, 5w mobile, and a 100w base station VHF radio through work. All within about 50' or so of my home. I figure the handheld and mobil unit will work fine if the power go's out. However if I have to work both of those are usually with me. I wanted something simple and reliable for the Mrs. to have to monitor weather and news updates at at home.

    I like the idea of the multi power source for the Eton radios (AC, solar, crank, battery what more can you ask for?!?), the AM/FM, NOAA, and Short-wave features are great. The flashlight, cell phone charger, siren, etc. seem like more like showy crap to me.

    Any other recommendations for a radio w/ those features?
    As a rule, the crank/solar/peat fire/whatever radios are shit. I'm not aware of anyone that makes one that is anything resembling quality. That said, the ability to charge a phone via crank through a USB port is intriguing to me.

    That said, what exactly are you expecting your wife to need to monitor? If you want her to be able to monitor your agency communications, you are going to need a scanner of some description, and depending on what radio system your local area is on, that might run you up to $500 or so.

    For a radio-untrained person, a good AM/FM set is going to be all they can handle. Operating an HF receiver ("shortwave") is going to be beyond their capabilities unless it is carefully set up beforehand by someone who knows what they are doing, and some instructions are provided.

    Are you set up with GMRS/FRS for local area tactical-type communications? If so, this thing looks a little interesting.

    http://www.ambientweather.com/miraxtbacaem.html

    I haven't handled one, and I'm sure it's not what I think of as quality, but it does offer AM/FM, a built-in Weather Alert using the NOAA weather frequencies, and 5 different power options. Worth a look for a budget unit.

  10. #10
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    If you're looking for a radio I'd highly consider getting a Yaesu VX-3R. It will scan AM Broadcast, FM, SW Band, VHF, UHF, Air Band, ACT1, UHF TV, 800 Cellular and MARS (mod). Not only that but it will transmit on 2M and 440. You should also be able to receive FRS/GMRS and can transmit, with some modifications. In an emergency situation you can transmit without a license. Although they are easy to get. The radio costs $170.

    No it won't charge your camera, ipod, or cell phone but in an emergency, that's not important. I would consider getting an AA case for it then stocking some lithium's. The regular battery is a rechargeable but you'll have to keep it recharged. Rechargeable don't store power over a long period of time so the Lithium AA's would be more dependable as a Emergency only radio.

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