What was/is your 'Kitchen Radio'?
Happily, my family always had a 'Kitchen Radio', a true British custom. I can't remember what the first one was, but by 1970, it was a beige coloured Bush radio.
When I left home in the late 1970s, I had a Roberts, which was replaced in 2004 by a Sony. It was expensive at £53 and it had very little by way of features and tuning through the stations is snail-paced.
However, it is extremely robust. I twice dropped it, completely submerged into my hot bath. It died twice and came back to life twice (after 24 hours to dry out). I am listening to Radio 4 on it, as I type. It has great sound, clear with enough volume.
But I fancy a change.
I've seen a Sony Dab that has caught my attention. If it comes back in stock at £35, I'll buy it. I don't want to pay more than £35.
I have a question. When tuning in on Dab, do you have to extend the aerial, or is that just for FM?
A picture of my current radio............
Happily, my family always had a 'Kitchen Radio', a true British custom. I can't remember what the first one was, but by 1970, it was a beige coloured Bush radio.
When I left home in the late 1970s, I had a Roberts, which was replaced in 2004 by a Sony. It was expensive at £53 and it had very little by way of features and tuning through the stations is snail-paced.
However, it is extremely robust. I twice dropped it, completely submerged into my hot bath. It died twice and came back to life twice (after 24 hours to dry out). I am listening to Radio 4 on it, as I type. It has great sound, clear with enough volume.
But I fancy a change.
I've seen a Sony Dab that has caught my attention. If it comes back in stock at £35, I'll buy it. I don't want to pay more than £35.
I have a question. When tuning in on Dab, do you have to extend the aerial, or is that just for FM?
A picture of my current radio............
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