I had one of these when I was a kid, sold it to get money for college. Thanks for sharing this. Instead of buying new stuff, I find myself buying stuff I used to own 40 years ago and refurbishing it. Old age I guess :-) Thanks for sharing, brought back good memories.
I had a DX-160 in '74-75 on my tour at Adak. My 1st SW receiver. I persuaded the weather office (Navy) chain of command to let their electronics tech (Robbie) string a longwire antenna with multiple taps on the roof of our barracks and I was in business, logging stations all over the Pacific, just for starters. We were entertainment-deprived, having only Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS) on the island, operating one channel each of radio and tv, the tv only 8 hours a day and in black and white. The radio was mostly 60s old fogie stuff, but with a few west coast radio shows for the average-age sailors (about 19). So plugging the lead in to our AM radios brought in Canadian and Alaskan radio stations playing Top 40 stuff that was much better for morale. But that DX-160 was an awesome little receiver, and made me a dedicated Radio Shack customer for many years.
Great video. This was my first ham rig back in 1975 when I was just entering the hobby. My mom bought this for me and I loved this radio. I traded it towards one of my first transceivers when I got my license. Like you I have been thinking about buying one of these as I recreate what I envisioned as my "dream shack" back in the mid-70's. Enjoy!
My dad bought one of these radios new and still has it to this day and working great. Interesting to note the side speaker was used as the squawk box in the Apollo 13 movie just with a nasa sticker over it.
I have 2, replaced all caps and transistors. Did alignment, units work as new. I noticed a couple solder joints that were a little bit suspect went over them well. radio is so much fun to play with I feel like im 15 again. Welcome to the club
Me too from Australia, found on one of the buy swap sell sites, first receiver I had at 17, Like everyone have retraced all the first radio's, almost pristine, hasnt got an SO239 so I will have to mod and build an antenna for it in 1977 just had a lump of wire on the fence Pete VK3TQ
I have a DX-160. My dad bought it for me for Christmas in the mid 70's. I spent many evenings listening to Shortwave stations into the wee hours. :-) TAB books used to put out SWL guides, that had stations & times listed which used to help. I remember my dad & I put up a long wire antenna, maybe 60-70 feet , that went from the corner of the house (using a mast) to a tree on the other end of the back yard (with insulators on each end). I remember we had trouble with the antenna wire snapping when we had high winds, because one end was around the tree. There was an old ham radio guy in town, I remember he had a huge diamond shaped antenna with a rotor on the roof, and we stopped and asked him about the antenna. He told us to put a clothes line pulley on the mast side, and a weight hanging down, so when the tree swayed the line would have slack with the pulley & weight. Wallah!... It worked, and never snapped the line again. I had to lubricate the pulley every year. I used to have QSL cards from a bunch of SW radio stations, the BBC, Radio RSA - South Africa, to name a couple. I also had a world map on my bedroom wall, with push-pins of all the countries I tuned in. I haven't really used the DX-160 in a long, long, time. I fired it up about a year ago and it still works. Years ago I made a better speaker with wooden housing, and it sounded better. I'm thinking of hooking it back up again, and maybe doing some mods. If you know of some good mods for the DX-160, could you share them? Thanks.
Thanks RadioHamGuy for the video. Yes I have a DX-160 here with speaker that I bought at a swap meet. It's been sitting in a corner here in the shack and hasn't been turn on for about 6 years. You peaked my interest again so I will get this radio out and connect it up. Conditions on short wave isn't great but I will give it a try. Thanks again for bring an old boat anchor to life.
I have had my DX 160 since the mid 70s. I have it next to my bed so I can listen in to world at night. The newer digital model radios are easier to dial in but they aren't as much fun to operate as the old analog 160. The only repairs I've done to it has been to replace the illumination lights for the face. Got those off the wall displays at radio shack. Still going strong.
It is interesting how well this Realistic stuff has stood the test of time. I still have my DX160, plus a heap of classic stereo gear still in use, some 27mHz CB gear, even a clock radio from 1981 called a 'Realistic Chronomatic225' still running on my desk. It spent it's first 30 years alongside the bed before the wife decided to update it, so it came out to the workshop office. The more trendy replacement bedside clock radio's have each lasted about 2 years max... So since 1981 when I purchased it with my first paycheck, it has run continuously for over 324000 hours, all led segments uniformly bright, the radio still works despite the deterioration in the music content quality, and being mains frequency locked, the clock is still accurate. That great era before engineered failure came along towards the end of the 80's..
Watched the video, it really took me back to when I was in high school and saved all my money for one of these. Good solid rig, I must've heard about 70 or 80 countries on it!
Thanks for the video. I had a chance a few months back to pick one up for cheap but turned it down for less then favorable reviews. Now I wish I had it.
Just got one of these today from my local radio club donation pile. Opened it first to check the dirt conditions inside and after a quick brush clean; I turned it on and it fired right up. I will clean it up and update some components as needed but will try to tamper with it as little as possible. Just like you, this is something I dreamed of in the early 80's and very glad it will sit in my shack next to my ICom 7300.
Funny how we use EBay to get the things we wanted but could never get in our youth. My first CB radio was a Robyn SX-101 and I really liked it but it got stolen out of my truck. back in the 1970s. I recently got one from EBay, still in the original box and styrofoam that looks and works like it is new off the shelf!
As a shortwave DXers in the 70s I had a DX160. Great rig. Dead nuts on frequency. With my World Radio TV Handbook (WRTH) I was able to get QSLs from 70 countries on a simple wire antenna. Exhausting all SW stations I could hear, I decided to learn what the dits and dahs were al about and in 1980 got my novice KA1FXK.
I have a secondhand Radio Shack DX394 bought from the NZ equivalent of Ebay. The radio, which has been completely re-cap and modified, provides great enjoyment and a complete change from my Airspy HF+ Discovery/SDR Console. I really enjoyed your video. Thanks for sharing it.
Thanks for the offer, I did fine an online version that works fine for me for the manual. Thanks for the advice on the tuning, I did finally figure that out, the alignment was off on mine but after I did my alignment now, it is calibrated and works great as you say for tuning each band segment.
Congrats - I did the same thing - bought my 160 a few years back and it has been a wonderful unit. I always had wanted one and it finally was something I was able to latch on to for a nominal price. Performs beautifully with a dipole antenna and I love mine.
When I was 12 ('72), The Realistic DX-150 was on the market. Man I wanted one of those BAD. It was about 10 years later that I got the DX-300. The DX-160 looks and sounds like a solid radio.
Very nice little radio. I got one for Christmas 1979. It was a nice transition rig between my CB hobby and Ham Radio. The following Christmas I got an HW-8 so I never used the DX-160 for operating. Like you, I bought one recently just for the memories! Thanks for posting!
My dad had one of those! He then gave it to me when he got his Sangean. I remember playing with it as a kid. It kept my interest in radio up until I could get a ham ticket. Enjoy that radio. I am glad to see that they are still being used and are not scrapped.
Love the radio, always been partial to Realistic and Hallicrafters radios. Still have a s120 from my 1976 High School Ham radio club !! Did not have much money for the club then so we used an E.F Johnson transmitter and the s120 as a receiver. Those were the days !! weren't they ?
Wow, thanks for this video, it sure brought back a lot of happy memories. :) The DX-160 was my first shortwave receiver many, many moons ago. ;) When I bought it new in the late 70's there were more shortwave wave stations on air compared to now. The radio also inspired me to gain an interest in ham (amateur) radio, of which some years later I became a ham radio op. Although not all that active these days, I do have the occasional "rag-chew" on local 2-metre's. (hi hi). Great work on the vid, looking forward to more of the same in 2014. P.S. Also watched your excellent vid on "Building a Multi-band HF Antenna."
Yep.....have one just like it. Also from e-Bay several years ago. I need to finish the set-up of my shack and put my HAM license to use. Thanks for the great vid.
Great looking..and sounding receiver. Never had anything quite that fancy, my father bought me a world band receiver, from one of his gas credit cards. Guess I was around 11 or 12 years old,hand that until I joined the Army and once through boot camp took it with me to my first duty station in Ma, Thanks for the memories.
What a nice and old friend ! I wanted to have one when I was a young shortwave listener...about 40years ago.Yours are in very good condition. May you have a good time with your new friend ! 73.¥
Thank you for the prompt reply. Much appreciated! I wanted to hear it directly from someone with experience and a true love of radios. I'll get right on to finding that electronic spray cleaner. Best of wishes for 2013 and beyond!
Very nice rig, good purchase.Got mine last year off E-Pay also.Was hard to put it away, but both my Dx-300 and 302 I enjoy better.Got the dx-100, 150B, 160, 200, 300 and 302.The 160 is a big time drifter, as are all GRE radios except the 300 series.I use a Pioneer 8 ohm speaker which help a lot with audio quality.The 150 & 150 A have the internal speaker which are less cumbersome.Cleaned and lubed the pots and waffers, and works very well.Great video, and good luck with the analog rig...
I bought one of these in the 70s . Sadly I sold it after a few years. Finally got another about a year ago . Wonderful to relive those times . They are amazingly reliable. Mine is untouched but still works fine . I wonder if any of the radios on sale today will still be working after so many years . I think not . Hope you are still enjoying yours . Regards from the UK .
It is fun to get things that look brand new from the 70's. Also it is great to be able to sell things for a reasonable price on eBay rather than 25 cents at a rummage like it was pre-eBay.
I did not use a scope, I had a signal generator and tuned each coil for max on the S-meter and by sound level. That worked fine and really improved my radio, for some reason it was off a ways, either by aged components or maybe someone else tried tuning on it at one time.
A longwire antenna is a good choice for this radio. Or any wire hooked up to the back that you can string up around the room or even better out a window and up to a tree, not critical, the most problem is getting the wire away from noise sources.
Sounds like a lot of good memories there with that radio, great to hear! I always wanted to buy a new one at that time but wasn't until now that I finally get to play around with one, lol. Yes, Bob is a good mentor and helper with anything like that, great to hear that story.
I had one of these back in the day. It's a bit fussy with stability, but it does quite well. The main reason I wanted one was for the 1750 meter band (165 - 190 Khz) Very few radios I could find will tune that band.
Oh, I did have one of those, I worked at a Radio Shack store in high school and got a discount but had to save for a while to get it. It was a fun radio, I wish I would have kept it but sold it to my uncle after a few years since he was really interested in it and by that time I got a Kenwood 440 radio that covered all the same freqs on rx.
Fantastic video, thanks for all the information. I'm getting back into CB. I want to get into HAM. When I was a kid I was into CB but was never able to afford HAM. I just picked up this radio at a great price and look forward to playing with it. I want to pick up some HAM stuff and will be looking at some what of a budget to get started. I'm a bargain hunter so should be able to find something out there. Whatever it is, it will come to a good home, pretty excited about getting into one of my favorite hobbies. Thanks again...
This is a wonderful machine. I have a hole bunch of communication receivers and this one is one of the best (Kenwood, Realistic dx200, yaeshu and more ) After I removed changed R2 to 4k5 ohm and made a digital frequency display and did the alligment job. Super selective and sensitive. Installed a notch/cw filter for perfect cw and ssb sound.
You need the service manual for that radio, the complete instructions are covered for alignment there. I found mine on a website by searching for dx-160 service manual. I don't have the site handy at the moment but you should find it that way.
I bought this a display model from Radio Shack in 1980 - it lasted until around 2005 when all I would received was static on any frequency. solid radio for quite a while.
I know this video has whiskers on it but still envious! I hope everything worked out with this rig! I would LOVE one of those SP-150 for my ham radio setup!
These receivers are extremely good. The DX160 is very solidly made. They are (well-adjusted) extremely sensitive and selective. I added a tunable audio filter so that I can go from broadband to very narrowband. In some frequency bands it is even better than my Kenwood R1000! Great machines.
super cool radio Larry.hey thanks for the shout-out!!! looks like you got yourself a very nice radio there.i hope your new radio gives you much joy for may many moons.it sure sound sweet with that original speaker,and it looks really great condition. enjoy your new treasure my friend. 73,davy KB3YJO
I have one as well. Joy to mess around with. She drifts for a few minutes, but once warm she rocks! I like the mystery of not knowing the exact freq I am on. Brings back fond memories.
I like the way you narating the show by using microphone so I could listen it very comfortable. Your show is very informative by using zooming so I enjoy the show very very much. I also like your unit Realistic DX 160. Warm greeting from Indonesia.
I would have hit the floor if I had one of these great radios back in the day, but I got started with a DX-100 which was a wee pig but I heard the world! I recently got a good deal on an SP-150 external speaker and I use it with my Icom IC-718 amateur rig presently. 73 DE N2NLQ
nice radio! i got the last one in 1980 as a demo model from the store. i got it as a graduation present from my mom. i also have a 150b that is in great shape and apperently is fairly rare because of the short time frame it was made. i guess that at least 5 versions were made on this set.from what i have seen on the internet. and catalogs. good luck!! love these sets!! ed.
I bought one of these back in 1972 and had many happy hours DXing with it. The last few decades it just sat around collecting dust so I finally threw it in the trash a few years ago as outdated technology. I had no idea people still wanted these things.
when I was 12 years old the 160 was my dream radio in 76. I never actually used one until 2005 when I rented a condo at a ski resort for 2 days and this radio was there with a 30 foot longwire antenna pretty cool experience almost 30 years later.
Cool, sounds a lot like me, always liked it back then in the store and I was about the same age at that time, finally got to play with one after all these years just to see what it would have been like. Almost the exact same situation as you and from other comments I get I think there are a lot of us out there.
I actually bought one of those units brand new in 1976. (actually it was the 160-A). I sold it along with a mil surplus Angry 5 rig (ANGRR-5) (which I now kick myself whenever I think about it) a few years later when I became a professional musician.
I really enjoyed your vid on the DX-160. I recently acquired a near mint unit on Ebay, so that I could return to @ 1975-76 when I bought the DX-160. Many many hrs logged on it, and I QSLd the world, it seemed. I loved that unit then, & I do now. Enjoy that baby. I have subscribed, to hopefully see a mod vid, and your other vids.
I had a realistic 150a first real shortwave radio I had , built some simple kits before that bought one for 80 dollars in 1978 brings back pleasant memories
Thanks, I have always loved this exact unit too. Enjoyed the video !!! Remember the old, "Sky Buddy" era rigs ? Heath-kit had a basic c.w, transmitter, running side by side. THAT REALLY WAS "WORKING" A STATION, the "golden days" of ham radio and the yellow/redish glow of all the tubes against the back wall.. Thanks & 73, kj4ww
Brought back memories of the Radio Shack store I used to visit and drool over this receiver that I couldn't afford and my parents wouldn't let me buy in the '70's. Got an Astronaut 8 out of my bargaining though!
Nice video, very informative. I looked up the 1976 RS catalogue and this rig sold for $159.95. What a shame they don't sell good stuff like this anymore. Nowadays, all they sell is CRAP! That's why they are teeter-tottering on the edge of abyss.
the alignment could be off for the AM band possibly, also, it does use an internal antenna for AM band and the cabinet kind of shields it somewhat, so it hears better in the direction of the back of the radio.
Yes, this is usually very simple to take care of. It is a dirty volume control. You will need to take the bottom cover off so you can get to the volume control pot, on the pot you will see a little bit of an opening under the 3 terminals that it has, just behind the terminals. You need to squirt a quick shot of TV tuner cleaner spray or electronic spray cleaner of some kind into that. Make sure power is unhooked, then rotate the control rapidly back in forth for 10 seconds or so, let dry.
I bought one off of Ebay but I believe I paid to much. From what I hear a lot of people were complaining about the audio being to "tinny". I fixed that by shoving two wash cloths in the speaker box and now it has good bass.
Looks like you also have the black plastic RS multimeter of the same vintage on the bench against the wall. I have one of those too. I enjoyed this presentation. Thanks.
Nice! Somthing about the ones made from the late 60's to the earlier 80's,,,they are my favorites!,,,I own a Panasonic 2600 and I wouldnt sell it for the world!
Nice video. Had one of these years ago and was a good performer. Great on SSB too. Mine drifted also after many years, but once it warmed up it was fine.
Hi there, all your videos are really interesting - and entertaining too! actually saw this a while back and loved the look of the dx160, and now, mainly due to you (ha!) I'm actually waiting myself for one to land on my door!! Thanks again for posting great videos, love your channel
RadioHamGuy Well I got the radio, nice old piece of kit, took your advice and cleaned switches/dials with switch cleaner, great, and noticed on mine link wire between gnd and ant2 missing, refitted one and working great now! Two tuning dials take some getting used to but once u got it works great! Thanks again Larry for inspiring me to get one of these great old radios. Ps- mine came with the speaker too, which I filled with foam packaging chips and it sounds better now, but still not hi-fi !! 73's
roughchippy Great to hear..I am sure you will have as much fun with it as I do with mine. Sure not top of the line but they are a fun radio to play around with! And they look great sitting on the shelf also or on the desk. 73 and good luck with the radio and have some fun tuning around.
Picked one of these up at a yard sale for 20.00, including a few extra speakers. It was a clean unit so I could not pass it up even if it might require some repair. Turned out it was electronically and mechanically fine and I use it everyday now to listen to talk radio while on the computer. These, like most boat anchors, are great. I guess you would call this a little boat anchor.
Nice receiver! I'd like to have one like that...but I need a portable like my DX-390. I saw the DX-160 in the 1977 Radio Shack catalog page 137 for $159.95 on the Radio Shack catalogs website
I remember that receiver in Tandy store back in mid 70s in the Uk , they said all realistic and radio shack products in Uk, I nearly bought on e but instead bought a yaesu frg7 . Great video. 73s mark g8rde
That is great to hear, please look into it more, you might enjoy the hobby. I have been doing it since I was 12 or 13 yrs old and have enjoyed it so much all my life. Let me know if you have any questions. A good place for info is arrl.org or just search ham radio. Let me know if you study for your license!
Hey I forgot to say thank you for your video I did enjoy watching you open up your radio receiver and operating radio receiver once again thank you very much 73’s from Ipswich south east Queensland Australia cheers buddy
Loved your video, I got mine from an estate sale with some old tube McIntosh equipment! I'm probably going to sell it as I'm not in to short wave but I did try it out and it seemed to work well. You certainly made it seem interesting though!
I want the realistic patrolman 9....I use to go to the radio shack in San Pedro California...in the 1970s....when I ditched school I would sit with the guys at the store...it was great...it was a expensive radio in that time 😮
This radio has a problem on the tuning printed circuit board with the rivets that connect the top side printed circuit to the printed circuit on the bottom side of the PC board. The fix is to solder jumper wires on the top side of the board to replace the connection made by the printed circuit on the bottom side. Shining a bright light through the bottom of the board shows clearly where to solder the jumper wires. This is the RF amp and Local Oscillator circuit so it will require alignment. Operation without repair may be intermittent.
i also remember back in the 60's when i wanted to get into the radio hobby but couldnt afford it, now my kids went off on their own and now i buy the stuff i always wanted and am having radio fun.,
Man, RadioHamGuy, you got a bad jones there! You even taped the unit arriving via "The Brown Santa". (Thought I had a bad addiction!) Thoroughly enjoyable videos on this venerable "canoe anchor" radio; thanks kindly for your efforts. de K6WHP
I had one of these when I was a kid, sold it to get money for college. Thanks for sharing this. Instead of buying new stuff, I find myself buying stuff I used to own 40 years ago and refurbishing it. Old age I guess :-) Thanks for sharing, brought back good memories.
I got this radio for Christmas back in 1978. I still have it and stills works great. Congratulations on your treasure find!!
Unfortunately I sold mine, likely purchased a few years earlier, not sure when I sold it. Time to find one again! 👍
I had a DX-160 in '74-75 on my tour at Adak. My 1st SW receiver. I persuaded the weather office (Navy) chain of command to let their electronics tech (Robbie) string a longwire antenna with multiple taps on the roof of our barracks and I was in business, logging stations all over the Pacific, just for starters. We were entertainment-deprived, having only Armed Forces Radio and Television Service (AFRTS) on the island, operating one channel each of radio and tv, the tv only 8 hours a day and in black and white. The radio was mostly 60s old fogie stuff, but with a few west coast radio shows for the average-age sailors (about 19).
So plugging the lead in to our AM radios brought in Canadian and Alaskan radio stations playing Top 40 stuff that was much better for morale. But that DX-160 was an awesome little receiver, and made me a dedicated Radio Shack customer for many years.
Great video. This was my first ham rig back in 1975 when I was just entering the hobby. My mom bought this for me and I loved this radio. I traded it towards one of my first transceivers when I got my license. Like you I have been thinking about buying one of these as I recreate what I envisioned as my "dream shack" back in the mid-70's. Enjoy!
My dad bought one of these radios new and still has it to this day and working great. Interesting to note the side speaker was used as the squawk box in the Apollo 13 movie just with a nasa sticker over it.
I've always had a fondness for the DX 160. It was the radio that prompted me to eventually acquire my ham license. 73 from Alabama!
I have 2, replaced all caps and transistors. Did alignment, units work as new. I noticed a couple solder joints that were a little bit suspect went over them well. radio is so much fun to play with I feel like im 15 again. Welcome to the club
Me too from Australia, found on one of the buy swap sell sites, first receiver I had at 17, Like everyone have retraced all the first radio's, almost pristine, hasnt got an SO239 so I will have to mod and build an antenna for it in 1977 just had a lump of wire on the fence Pete VK3TQ
I have a DX-160. My dad bought it for me for Christmas in the mid 70's. I spent many evenings listening to Shortwave stations into the wee hours. :-) TAB books used to put out SWL guides, that had stations & times listed which used to help.
I remember my dad & I put up a long wire antenna, maybe 60-70 feet , that went from the corner of the house (using a mast) to a tree on the other end of the back yard (with insulators on each end). I remember we had trouble with the antenna wire snapping when we had high winds, because one end was around the tree. There was an old ham radio guy in town, I remember he had a huge diamond shaped antenna with a rotor on the roof, and we stopped and asked him about the antenna. He told us to put a clothes line pulley on the mast side, and a weight hanging down, so when the tree swayed the line would have slack with the pulley & weight. Wallah!... It worked, and never snapped the line again. I had to lubricate the pulley every year. I used to have QSL cards from a bunch of SW radio stations, the BBC, Radio RSA - South Africa, to name a couple. I also had a world map on my bedroom wall, with push-pins of all the countries I tuned in.
I haven't really used the DX-160 in a long, long, time. I fired it up about a year ago and it still works. Years ago I made a better speaker with wooden housing, and it sounded better. I'm thinking of hooking it back up again, and maybe doing some mods. If you know of some good mods for the DX-160, could you share them? Thanks.
Thanks RadioHamGuy for the video. Yes I have a DX-160 here with speaker that I bought at a swap meet. It's been sitting in a corner here in the shack and hasn't been turn on for about 6 years. You peaked my interest again so I will get this radio out and connect it up. Conditions on short wave isn't great but I will give it a try. Thanks again for bring an old boat anchor to life.
I have had my DX 160 since the mid 70s. I have it next to my bed so I can listen in to world at night. The newer digital model radios are easier to dial in but they aren't as much fun to operate as the old analog 160. The only repairs I've done to it has been to replace the illumination lights for the face. Got those off the wall displays at radio shack. Still going strong.
It is interesting how well this Realistic stuff has stood the test of time. I still have my DX160, plus a heap of classic stereo gear still in use, some 27mHz CB gear, even a clock radio from 1981 called a 'Realistic Chronomatic225' still running on my desk. It spent it's first 30 years alongside the bed before the wife decided to update it, so it came out to the workshop office. The more trendy replacement bedside clock radio's have each lasted about 2 years max... So since 1981 when I purchased it with my first paycheck, it has run continuously for over 324000 hours, all led segments uniformly bright, the radio still works despite the deterioration in the music content quality, and being mains frequency locked, the clock is still accurate. That great era before engineered failure came along towards the end of the 80's..
My Realistic STA 870 is getting a little scratchy but I can't complain
Watched the video, it really took me back to when I was in high school and saved all my money for one of these. Good solid rig, I must've heard about 70 or 80 countries on it!
Instablaster.
Thanks for the video. I had a chance a few months back to pick one up for cheap but turned it down for less then favorable reviews. Now I wish I had it.
Just got one of these today from my local radio club donation pile. Opened it first to check the dirt conditions inside and after a quick brush clean; I turned it on and it fired right up. I will clean it up and update some components as needed but will try to tamper with it as little as possible. Just like you, this is something I dreamed of in the early 80's and very glad it will sit in my shack next to my ICom 7300.
Funny how we use EBay to get the things we wanted but could never get in our youth. My first CB radio was a Robyn SX-101 and I really liked it but it got stolen out of my truck. back in the 1970s. I recently got one from EBay, still in the original box and styrofoam that looks and works like it is new off the shelf!
Iam 70 doing things now i wanted when I was a kid and couldnt
As a shortwave DXers in the 70s I had a DX160. Great rig. Dead nuts on frequency. With my World Radio TV Handbook (WRTH) I was able to get QSLs from 70 countries on a simple wire antenna.
Exhausting all SW stations I could hear, I decided to learn what the dits and dahs were al about and in 1980 got my novice KA1FXK.
I have a secondhand Radio Shack DX394 bought from the NZ equivalent of Ebay. The radio, which has been completely re-cap and modified, provides great enjoyment and a complete change from my Airspy HF+ Discovery/SDR Console. I really enjoyed your video. Thanks for sharing it.
Thanks for the offer, I did fine an online version that works fine for me for the manual. Thanks for the advice on the tuning, I did finally figure that out, the alignment was off on mine but after I did my alignment now, it is calibrated and works great as you say for tuning each band segment.
I had one for years, very hot front end with an FET preamp. Very nice!
Congrats - I did the same thing - bought my 160 a few years back and it has been a wonderful unit. I always had wanted one and it finally was something I was able to latch on to for a nominal price. Performs beautifully with a dipole antenna and I love mine.
Great to see this classic radio working, and what good audio quality! I like the 'bloopers' section at the end.
When I was 12 ('72), The Realistic DX-150 was on the market. Man I wanted one of those BAD. It was about 10 years later that I got the DX-300. The DX-160 looks and sounds like a solid radio.
One of my favorite older rigs . I loved Radio Shack .
Very nice little radio. I got one for Christmas 1979. It was a nice transition rig between my CB hobby and Ham Radio. The following Christmas I got an HW-8 so I never used the DX-160 for operating. Like you, I bought one recently just for the memories! Thanks for posting!
Great, great video. I inherited one of these awhile back (in great shape) and my goal is to pull in the kind of signal you are getting. Amazing.
My dad had one of those! He then gave it to me when he got his Sangean. I remember playing with it as a kid. It kept my interest in radio up until I could get a ham ticket. Enjoy that radio. I am glad to see that they are still being used and are not scrapped.
Love the radio, always been partial to Realistic and Hallicrafters radios. Still have a s120 from my 1976 High School Ham radio club !! Did not have much money for the club then so we used an E.F Johnson transmitter and the s120 as a receiver. Those were the days !! weren't they ?
+jerry simone Yes, we sure had a lot of fun with that kind of equipment back in the day for sure!
thanks so much for the tour of the 160 I always wondered about this short wave receiver thanks again!
Wow, thanks for this video, it sure brought back a lot of happy memories. :) The DX-160 was my first shortwave receiver many, many moons ago. ;) When I bought it new in the late 70's there were more shortwave wave stations on air compared to now. The radio also inspired me to gain an interest in ham (amateur) radio, of which some years later I became a ham radio op. Although not all that active these days, I do have the occasional "rag-chew" on local 2-metre's. (hi hi).
Great work on the vid, looking forward to more of the same in 2014.
P.S.
Also watched your excellent vid on "Building a Multi-band HF Antenna."
A comprehensive video! Perfect. Enjoyed every minute of it. Thanks for uploading.
Thank you! It was fun to do.
Yep.....have one just like it. Also from e-Bay several years ago. I need to finish the set-up of my shack and put my HAM license to use. Thanks for the great vid.
Wow! I remember saving, and saving, and saving in High School to buy one of those. Loved that radio!
Cool, thanks for the vid! Buying a DX160 this weekend and appreciate finding this vid to know what to expect.
Great looking..and sounding receiver. Never had anything quite that fancy, my father bought me a world band receiver, from one of his gas credit cards. Guess I was around 11 or 12 years old,hand that until I joined the Army and once through boot camp took it with me to my first duty station in Ma, Thanks for the memories.
What a nice and old friend ! I wanted to have one when I was a young shortwave listener...about 40years ago.Yours are in very good condition. May you have a good time with your new friend ! 73.¥
I owned a DX-160 in 1976! Had a ball listening to it and even used it to learn morse code for the US Novice Amateur radio exam. VE3EEI
Thank you for the prompt reply. Much appreciated! I wanted to hear it directly from someone with experience and a true love of radios. I'll get right on to finding that electronic spray cleaner. Best of wishes for 2013 and beyond!
John Reagan a
Very nice rig, good purchase.Got mine last year off E-Pay also.Was hard to put it away, but both my Dx-300 and 302 I enjoy better.Got the dx-100, 150B, 160, 200, 300 and 302.The 160 is a big time drifter, as are all GRE radios except the 300 series.I use a Pioneer 8 ohm speaker which help a lot with audio quality.The 150 & 150 A have the internal speaker which are less cumbersome.Cleaned and lubed the pots and waffers, and works very well.Great video, and good luck with the analog rig...
As A Kid I remember Seeing This Unit BRAND NEW At My Radio Shack
10 years later and I can still find this video very useful 👍 thx. 😊
I just got a Realistic DX-160 from a Ham guy. About a month ago, I'm learning 👍👍😎
I bought one of these in the 70s . Sadly I sold it after a few years. Finally got another about a year ago . Wonderful to relive those times . They are amazingly reliable. Mine is untouched but still works fine . I wonder if any of the radios on sale today will still be working after so many years . I think not . Hope you are still enjoying yours . Regards from the UK .
It is fun to get things that look brand new from the 70's. Also it is great to be able to sell things for a reasonable price on eBay rather than 25 cents at a rummage like it was pre-eBay.
I did not use a scope, I had a signal generator and tuned each coil for max on the S-meter and by sound level. That worked fine and really improved my radio, for some reason it was off a ways, either by aged components or maybe someone else tried tuning on it at one time.
Cool vid. I have a DX 302 Shortwave receiver I bought in 1980, still have it and it works great
I owned one of these for years...finally sold it at a local swapfest....I miss it but I hope the new owner enjoys it.
A longwire antenna is a good choice for this radio. Or any wire hooked up to the back that you can string up around the room or even better out a window and up to a tree, not critical, the most problem is getting the wire away from noise sources.
Sounds like a lot of good memories there with that radio, great to hear! I always wanted to buy a new one at that time but wasn't until now that I finally get to play around with one, lol. Yes, Bob is a good mentor and helper with anything like that, great to hear that story.
I had one of these back in the day. It's a bit fussy with stability, but it does quite well. The main reason I wanted one was for the 1750 meter band (165 - 190 Khz) Very few radios I could find will tune that band.
Oh, I did have one of those, I worked at a Radio Shack store in high school and got a discount but had to save for a while to get it. It was a fun radio, I wish I would have kept it but sold it to my uncle after a few years since he was really interested in it and by that time I got a Kenwood 440 radio that covered all the same freqs on rx.
Thanks and yes, I really am enjoying that radio, it is just a fun radio for some reason and it sure looks nice also with all those bands on display.
Fantastic video, thanks for all the information. I'm getting back into CB. I want to get into HAM. When I was a kid I was into CB but was never able to afford HAM. I just picked up this radio at a great price and look forward to playing with it. I want to pick up some HAM stuff and will be looking at some what of a budget to get started. I'm a bargain hunter so should be able to find something out there. Whatever it is, it will come to a good home, pretty excited about getting into one of my favorite hobbies. Thanks again...
Enjoyed the video. Brought me back to the 70's when I would spend hours on my dx-160.
This is a wonderful machine. I have a hole bunch of communication receivers and this one is one of the best (Kenwood, Realistic dx200, yaeshu and more ) After I removed changed R2 to 4k5 ohm and made a digital frequency display and did the alligment job. Super selective and sensitive. Installed a notch/cw filter for perfect cw and ssb sound.
You need the service manual for that radio, the complete instructions are covered for alignment there. I found mine on a website by searching for dx-160 service manual. I don't have the site handy at the moment but you should find it that way.
Fantastic, very very beautiful this radio. Congratulations.
I bought this a display model from Radio Shack in 1980 - it lasted until around 2005 when all I would received was static on any frequency. solid radio for quite a while.
I know this video has whiskers on it but still envious!
I hope everything worked out with this rig!
I would LOVE one of those SP-150 for my ham radio setup!
Thanks for posting. Reminds me of my teenage years.
Love your accent!
These receivers are extremely good. The DX160 is very solidly made. They are (well-adjusted) extremely sensitive and selective. I added a tunable audio filter so that I can go from broadband to very narrowband. In some frequency bands it is even better than my Kenwood R1000! Great machines.
This is a very nice radio, Realistic was a good brand and made to last. Also a good review you made.
super cool radio Larry.hey thanks for the shout-out!!! looks like you got yourself a very nice radio there.i hope your new radio gives you much joy for may many moons.it sure sound sweet with that original speaker,and it looks really great condition.
enjoy your new treasure my friend.
73,davy KB3YJO
Nice rig I just bought a realistic r300 for 20 bucks and I love it,nothing beats the old rigs. 73 terry
I have one as well. Joy to mess around with. She drifts for a few minutes, but once warm she rocks! I like the mystery of not knowing the exact freq I am on. Brings back fond memories.
I like the way you narating the show by using microphone so I could listen it very comfortable. Your show is very informative by using zooming so I enjoy the show very very much. I also like your unit Realistic DX 160. Warm greeting from Indonesia.
this was an excellent tour of the radio. thank you for sharing.
Radio was so exciting for me at age 11 and 12, I sure have a lot of great memories. And this radio was one of them, so I finally got one, lol.
I would have hit the floor if I had one of these great radios back in the day, but I got started with a DX-100 which was a wee pig but I heard the world!
I recently got a good deal on an SP-150 external speaker and I use it with my Icom IC-718 amateur rig presently.
73 DE N2NLQ
Poo
nice radio! i got the last one in 1980 as a demo model from the store. i got it as a graduation present from my mom. i also have a 150b that is in great shape and apperently is fairly rare because of the short time frame it was made. i guess that at least 5 versions were made on this set.from what i have seen on the internet. and catalogs. good luck!! love these sets!! ed.
I bought one of these back in 1972 and had many happy hours DXing with it. The last few decades it just sat around collecting dust so I finally threw it in the trash a few years ago as outdated technology. I had no idea people still wanted these things.
when I was 12 years old the 160 was my dream radio in 76. I never actually used one until 2005 when I rented a condo at a ski resort for 2 days and this radio was there with a 30 foot longwire antenna pretty cool experience almost 30 years later.
Cool, sounds a lot like me, always liked it back then in the store and I was about the same age at that time, finally got to play with one after all these years just to see what it would have been like. Almost the exact same situation as you and from other comments I get I think there are a lot of us out there.
Good video. I could almost feel your nervous excitement as you unboxed it. Glad it worked out well for you.
I actually bought one of those units brand new in 1976. (actually it was the 160-A). I sold it along with a mil surplus Angry 5 rig (ANGRR-5) (which I now kick myself whenever I think about it) a few years later when I became a professional musician.
I bought a used Hallicrafters S-38 and listened in the 50s and 60s. Shortwave is not like it use be as a lot of broadcasters shutdown.
I really enjoyed your vid on the DX-160. I recently acquired a near mint unit on Ebay, so that I could return to @ 1975-76 when I bought the DX-160. Many many hrs logged on it, and I QSLd the world, it seemed. I loved that unit then, & I do now. Enjoy that baby. I have subscribed, to hopefully see a mod vid, and your other vids.
I had a realistic 150a first real shortwave radio I had , built some simple kits before that bought one for 80 dollars in 1978 brings back pleasant memories
Thanks, I have always loved this exact unit too. Enjoyed the video !!! Remember the old, "Sky Buddy" era rigs ? Heath-kit had a basic c.w, transmitter, running side by side. THAT REALLY WAS "WORKING" A STATION, the "golden days" of ham radio and the yellow/redish glow of all the tubes against the back wall.. Thanks & 73, kj4ww
Brought back memories of the Radio Shack store I used to visit and drool over this receiver that I couldn't afford and my parents wouldn't let me buy in the '70's. Got an Astronaut 8 out of my bargaining though!
I bought the Allied AX-190 from Radio Shack back in 1976. I used it as a Novice Operator for several years..
Nice video, very informative. I looked up the 1976 RS catalogue and this rig sold for $159.95. What a shame they don't sell good stuff like this anymore. Nowadays, all they sell is CRAP! That's why they are teeter-tottering on the edge of abyss.
Thanks, yes, I am doing some cap changes now for audio improvement and will also want to try a better external speaker. Having fun with it so far.
the alignment could be off for the AM band possibly, also, it does use an internal antenna for AM band and the cabinet kind of shields it somewhat, so it hears better in the direction of the back of the radio.
Yes, this is usually very simple to take care of. It is a dirty volume control. You will need to take the bottom cover off so you can get to the volume control pot, on the pot you will see a little bit of an opening under the 3 terminals that it has, just behind the terminals. You need to squirt a quick shot of TV tuner cleaner spray or electronic spray cleaner of some kind into that. Make sure power is unhooked, then rotate the control rapidly back in forth for 10 seconds or so, let dry.
I bought one off of Ebay but I believe I paid to much. From what I hear a lot of people were complaining about the audio being to "tinny". I fixed that by shoving two wash cloths in the speaker box and now it has good bass.
Looks like you also have the black plastic RS multimeter of the same vintage on the bench against the wall. I have one of those too. I enjoyed this presentation. Thanks.
Nice! Somthing about the ones made from the late 60's to the earlier 80's,,,they are my favorites!,,,I own a Panasonic 2600 and I wouldnt sell it for the world!
Nice video. Had one of these years ago and was a good performer. Great on SSB too. Mine drifted also after many years, but once it warmed up it was fine.
Hi there, all your videos are really interesting - and entertaining too! actually saw this a while back and loved the look of the dx160, and now, mainly due to you (ha!) I'm actually waiting myself for one to land on my door!! Thanks again for posting great videos, love your channel
Thanks and have some fun with that radio when you get it!
RadioHamGuy Well I got the radio, nice old piece of kit, took your advice and cleaned switches/dials with switch cleaner, great, and noticed on mine link wire between gnd and ant2 missing, refitted one and working great now! Two tuning dials take some getting used to but once u got it works great! Thanks again Larry for inspiring me to get one of these great old radios. Ps- mine came with the speaker too, which I filled with foam packaging chips and it sounds better now, but still not hi-fi !! 73's
roughchippy Great to hear..I am sure you will have as much fun with it as I do with mine. Sure not top of the line but they are a fun radio to play around with! And they look great sitting on the shelf also or on the desk. 73 and good luck with the radio and have some fun tuning around.
Picked one of these up at a yard sale for 20.00, including a few extra speakers. It was a clean unit so I could not pass it up even if it might require some repair. Turned out it was electronically and mechanically fine and I use it everyday now to listen to talk radio while on the computer. These, like most boat anchors, are great. I guess you would call this a little boat anchor.
I just bought one on eBay still in the box. A friend of mine in high school back in '76 had one and I've kind of wanted one ever since.
Nice receiver! I'd like to have one like that...but I need a portable like my DX-390. I saw the DX-160 in the 1977 Radio Shack catalog page 137 for $159.95 on the Radio Shack catalogs website
I remember that receiver in Tandy store back in mid 70s in the Uk , they said all realistic and radio shack products in Uk, I nearly bought on e but instead bought a yaesu frg7 . Great video. 73s mark g8rde
I just got a 160 and it seems to be working fine.
Did not know anything about Ham radio until today, watching your videos. Very interesting hobby, thinking about picking it up.
That is great to hear, please look into it more, you might enjoy the hobby. I have been doing it since I was 12 or 13 yrs old and have enjoyed it so much all my life. Let me know if you have any questions. A good place for info is arrl.org or just search ham radio. Let me know if you study for your license!
modestmouser05atx DO it ‼️
Hey I forgot to say thank you for your video I did enjoy watching you open up your radio receiver and operating radio receiver once again thank you very much 73’s from Ipswich south east Queensland Australia cheers buddy
Glad you enjoy the videos, thank you also!
A very worthwhile solid state general coverage RX... often available for little money.
Loved your video, I got mine from an estate sale with some old tube McIntosh equipment! I'm probably going to sell it as I'm not in to short wave but I did try it out and it seemed to work well. You certainly made it seem interesting though!
I want the realistic patrolman 9....I use to go to the radio shack in San Pedro California...in the 1970s....when I ditched school I would sit with the guys at the store...it was great...it was a expensive radio in that time 😮
I remember wanting that same radio the first time I saw it in the catalog, but the $159.95 was a little rich for a 15 year old kid ;-)
This radio has a problem on the tuning printed circuit board with the rivets that connect the top side printed circuit to the printed circuit on the bottom side of the PC board. The fix is to solder jumper wires on the top side of the board to replace the connection made by the printed circuit on the bottom side. Shining a bright light through the bottom of the board shows clearly where to solder the jumper wires. This is the RF amp and Local Oscillator circuit so it will require alignment. Operation without repair may be intermittent.
i also remember back in the 60's when i wanted to get into the radio hobby but couldnt afford it, now my kids went off on their own and now i buy the stuff i always wanted and am having radio fun.,
Man, RadioHamGuy, you got a bad jones there! You even taped the unit arriving via "The Brown Santa". (Thought I had a bad addiction!)
Thoroughly enjoyable videos on this venerable "canoe anchor" radio; thanks kindly for your efforts.
de K6WHP
+William Phinizy Thanks William, appreciate that very much! 73
+William Phinizy The Brown Santa. Thanks for giving me a good laugh.