Common Radio Reception Conditions
Several conditions prevent FM reception from
being completely clear and noise-free, such as
the following:
1. Distance/Strength
The strength of the FM signal is directly related
to the distance the signal must travel. The
listenable range of an average FM signal is
approximately 25 miles (40 kilometers). Beyond
this distance, the radio is operating in a fringe
area and the signal becomes weaker.
2. Terrain
The terrain (hilly, mountainous, tall buildings) of
the area over which the signal travels may
prevent the FM signal from being noise-free.
3. Rounded off frequencies
Some FM radio stations advertise a
"rounded-off" frequency which is not the
frequency they actually broadcast on. For
example, a radio station that is assigned a
frequency of 98.7 MHz may call itself "Radio 99"
even though 99.0 MHz is not an allowable FM
broadcast frequency.
Using the Controls of Your Cassette Tape
Player
NOTE: Radio power must be on to use the
cassette tape player.
NOTE: Adjust the volume, treble, bass, balance
and fade controls in the same manner
as for radio stations.
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