fan-of-fans
Well-known member
I have a GE Spacemaker radio that has an AM/FM/Weatherband radio, a CD player and a audio input jack. On AM it picks up nothing at all. Just static and on a few stations strange sounds.
I've opened up the unit and it seems to use some kind of rod as the AM antenna. Would it be possible to attach a wire to that bar and get better reception?
For FM and Weatherband it seems to use the power cord as the antenna. GE recommend the cord be extended out as far as possible. I do find having the cord stretched out instead of looped together or wrapped around the cord storage does improve the FM a lot. But it can be quite temperamental. For example if it touches another cord or sometimes if I walk in front of the radio, it gets static. As long as the cord is well extended and separated it works fine. But as I said it doesn't do anything on AM...
I've noticed some clock radios I've used also use the power cord for FM, but to get any AM they use a antenna that looks like wire looped around a square frame. Suppose you need a larger antenna due to the width of the AM frequency.
I've opened up the unit and it seems to use some kind of rod as the AM antenna. Would it be possible to attach a wire to that bar and get better reception?
For FM and Weatherband it seems to use the power cord as the antenna. GE recommend the cord be extended out as far as possible. I do find having the cord stretched out instead of looped together or wrapped around the cord storage does improve the FM a lot. But it can be quite temperamental. For example if it touches another cord or sometimes if I walk in front of the radio, it gets static. As long as the cord is well extended and separated it works fine. But as I said it doesn't do anything on AM...
I've noticed some clock radios I've used also use the power cord for FM, but to get any AM they use a antenna that looks like wire looped around a square frame. Suppose you need a larger antenna due to the width of the AM frequency.