I just got a 2004 Prius Package 7. The radio reception is terrible! Has anyone else had this problem? Jim
- posted
19 years ago
I just got a 2004 Prius Package 7. The radio reception is terrible! Has anyone else had this problem? Jim
I just got a 2004 Prius Package 7. The radio reception is terrible! Has anyone else had this problem? Jim
It's the scanner - it goes to the signal it thinks is the right frequency butit's not. You must mannually fine-tune to that station. In other words, you should know the frequency you desire. JM
I assume that the dealer remembered to install the antenna before delivering it to you?
Hmmm. Sounds like AFC is a little too tight. Does it do this at higher frequencies or just the low ones? If it does this at high frequencies too you might want to mention this to the dealer. You didn't put in an after-market Sirius/XM satelite radio did you? Yes they have those for Prius
I find the reception in the package 9 to be outstanding. FM sensitivity is excellent, and AM sensitivity and selectivity is incredible. There is a local AM tower next to the freeway here in Santa Barbara that carries three local stations at 1290, 1340, and 1490. I can drive the freeway past the tower and listen to 1450 in Ventura about 30 miles away without a hint of interference. Every other car I've driven has failed miserably in this respect, with intermodulation and overload for about half a mile.
I have had some issues with the CD changer occasionally giving a "Check" message on some disks. Selecting a different disk and coming back to the failedone seems to fix it. I'm going to try swapping the disks around to see if it is the disk or the slot. I use the random across all disks setting which exercises the changer mechanism a lot more than listening to a single disk at a time.
D: I scanned, then manually tuned and preset all 6 spots with our favorite programs so scanning will not be a problem in the future as the Tucson market is pretty small...but I'm 70 and have enough problems elsewhere to worry about loose connections other than the one in my defibrillator.
The radio is perform> > Yes - I screwed in the attenna a bit but found out the real culprit was the scanner.
sensitivity
carries
miserably in
I've never heard of one tower supporting multiple AM stations, because the tower is the actual antenna; for more than one station, it means they would have to have some kind of isolation between the two transmitters to keep them from each other. This leads me to beliwve that maybe you're not really receiving that many stations on that tower. Maybe you're getting interference from more than one station at that location by intermodulation, where the station is acting like a local oscillator in your radio, and causing it to receive two at the same time.
listening to
connections other than the
Defibrillator? You sure you don't mean pacemaker? Only paramedics are allowed to use defibrillators! ;-)
BRRRZAP!!
There is a device called an AICD (automated internal cardiac defibrillator) that performs the same function as a paramedic's external defibrillator. Since it's internal, it uses much lower energy level (10-25 watts/second) versus 200-360 watts/second. Certain devices, like microwave ovens, radar guns, and theft detectors/metal detectors are notorious for disturbing the normal operation of AICD's and Pacemakers.
Kevin
"Watson A.Name - "Watt Sun, the Dark Remover"" wrote in message news: snipped-for-privacy@corp.supernews.com...
It is quite common. Typically separate transmitters and a matching circuit called a diplexer. Another technique is a singler broadband power amplifier being driven by separate exciters for the different frequencies. The matching circuits are somewhat complex as the antenna itself will be off-resonance for at least some if not all of the frequencies in use.
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