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Raddy RF886 Radio portátil de onda corta AM/FM/SW/VHF/WB Radio digital BT conexión con NOAA y alerta, radio de bolsillo recargable con antena de cable de 9.85 pies

Envío gratis en pedidos superiores a Mex $600.00

Mex $622.99

Mex $ 292 .00 Mex $292.00

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  • Rango de recepción más plio: pliando más allá de las radios FM/AM estándar, el RF886 incluye bandas VHF(30.00-199.975 MHz) y ondas cortas (3.20-21.95MHz) un espectro más plio de recepción de radio. Mantente informado sobre el clima peligroso con 7 bandas meteorológicas NOAA.
  • Sintonización digital: disfrute de una afinación digital precisa con el botón de afinación y los botones, con una búsqueda de ondas de medidor de banda completa. Almacena hasta 396 estaciones, con la opción de almaceniento automático y manual de la estación.
  • Antenas dobles una recepción más fuerte: beneficiarse de antenas duales, una antena integrada y una antena de cable de 10 pies suministrada con la radio, asegurando la recepción de doble señal y una potente capacidad de radio.
  • Conectividad BT: Conecte la radio a dispositivos BT ser un reproductor BT con excelente calidad de sonido. Y puedes disfrutar de la escucha privada con auriculares y seis efectos de sonido diferentes del modo BT.
  • Diseño multifuncional: la radio portátil de onda corta RF886 no es solo una radio; es un compañero versátil. Su taño compacto es de 124 x 67 x 29 mm, por lo que es ideal mano y transporte. Tiene una práctica carga tipo C, una linterna, una linterna y una función SOS y es perfecto actividades de emergencia y al aire última intervensión.



Descripción del producto

rf886

rf886

Temporizador de sueño y reloj despertador

Habilita que la radio se apague automáticamente después de un período de tiempo establecido. Además, configura una alarma para que se despierte mediante transmisión o zumbido.

rf886

Tu esencial nocturno

El RF886 es un kit fiable de aterrizaje por la noche con su linterna LED brillante para cortes de energía, aventuras al aire última intervensión y emergencias. También incluye una linterna y función de alarma SOS para una mayor seguridad.

rf886

Sumérgete en el sonido estéreo

Sumérgete en audio de alta calidad con soporte estéreo FM a través del conector de auriculares de 3,5 mm, mejorando tu experiencia auditiva.

rf886

Diseño fácil de usar

Navegue sin esfuerzo con una visualización LCD retroiluminada, botones grandes y una función de bloqueo del teclado, asegurando un funcionamiento cómodo e intuitivo en cualquier condición de iluminación.

rf886

Seis efectos de sonido

En modo de reproducción de radio o BT, RF886 admite seis tipos de ecualizadores para reproducir efectos de sonido: Normal, Pop, Rock, Jazz, Clásico y Country.

rf886

Ajuste versátil, fácil descubrimiento de estaciones

Disfrute de la flexibilidad de las opciones de búsqueda de estaciones automáticas y manuales. El RF886 hace que sea fácil escanear y guardar sus estaciones de radio preferidas con solo unos sencillos pasos.

Especificaciones:

Rango de frecuencia FM: 64-108 MHz; VHF: 30.00-199.975 MHz; AM: 520-1710 kHz; SW: 3,20-21,95 MHz; WB: 162.400-162.550 MHz
Sensibilidad límite de ruido FM: ≤15dB, HF: ≤15dB, AM: ≤70dB, SW: ≤40dB
Número de estaciones memorizadas FM=99, VHF=99, AM=99, SW=99
Versión BT VER 5.0
Distancia de transmisión BT <15 m
Máx. Consumo de energía ≤6 W
Fuente de alimentación CC 5 V/1 A
Batería recargable de iones de litio 1000 mAh/3,7 V
Altavoz USB tipo C 40 mm/4Q/5 W
Conector para auriculares Enchufe de 3,5 mm
Dimensiones (aprox.) 124 x 67 x 29 mm
rf886

Contenido de la caja:

Radio RF886 x 1 correa de muñeca, 1 cable tipo C, 1 manual de usuario x 1 antena de cable externo


rbhawks22
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 5 de marzo de 2025
Nice sound in a small package. Good reception for an inexpensive radio. Has a really bright light too. Battery life is pretty good too. I can recommend this for an inexpensive pocket radio!
777000
Comentado en México el 17 de enero de 2025
justo lo que necesitaba
Nanntte H.
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 30 de agosto de 2024
I can’t understand a lot of the negative reviews about this radio. But, as a couple of others have said, they are most likely due to inexperienced shortwave radio users. Regardless, this is a very inexpensive yet awesome radio. No, it doesn’t have some features, like single side band, that higher end and much more expensive radios have but, it works great with the features it does have. It’s small and compact and easy to carry and is solid and well built. It has NOAA weather frequencies (all 7) plus a weather alert function. It has a light and headphone jack. It has a clock and alarm. It has shortwave (meter band) with frequencies from 3.20 to 21.95 MHz. It is also capable of receiving VHF frequencies. It also has Bluetooth connectivity so you can play your own music from your phone, iPad, or computer. And, of course, it’s also an AM/FM radio. I live out in the country pretty far from any town or city and I get great reception, even with just the built-in antenna.It’s just a great all around radio at a very great price.
Jay
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 23 de agosto de 2024
Bought two. Fantastic little radios. Decent sound, better reception than other devices, Bluetooth receiver is a bonus, great for basic porch listening. No bass so it has that old time feel that isn’t distracting to your thoughts. Works with headphones. Has a bit of a learning curve and reading the manual is a near must because one shipped with 87.5 configured instead of 87 so it wouldn’t pickup local am at first. A little sensitive to interference when near other electronic and when charging. Only charges on 5v simple usb chargers, not my MacBook ones. Highly recommended. Very happy.
ARNALDO
Comentado en Brasil el 20 de noviembre de 2024
O autofalante é muito bom. O rádio tem uma boa sensibilidade de sintonia e quando se colocar a antena fica melhor ainda
LastGas
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 4 de septiembre de 2024
I bought this with a coupon for $20.79 just to check it out and see how it worked.My first reaction is that the radio was bigger than I expected. It's 2.6"L x 1.1"W x 4.9"H. It's huge compared to the Raddy RF75A for example, but smaller than a Tecsun PL-330.Everything works, including weather alerts, and I could also pick up weather on the VHF band, the only thing I found there. Note that you cannot receive air traffic on this radio because air traffic is in AM mode and the VHF band on this radio is only FM. You can turn air traffic frequencies, but you can't hear anything.The major problem with this radio is tuning, you have to jump with buttons, and then turn the knob a lot to get where you want to go. This is not a big deal on MW and FM, but it is on SW and really is on VHF.When the radio arrived, handling it caused to the display light to come on for a few seconds. The non-replaceable battery seemed nearly fully charged (3 bars) and the lock was not set. There are 13 buttons, 9 on the front and 4 on the side. There is an earphone jack, but no earphone supplied. Well, who doesn’t have a box of earphones already?This radio fits in my Swiss Army Knife category with a Bluetooth music player, flashlight, MW/FM/SW, weather band with alerts and VHF. (It doesn’t have an MP3 card slot.)The manual is a single sheet of paper that folds out to 24 pages total. I rate the print size as acceptable. It's better than some of the Chinese shortwave manuals I see, but still could use some work. There are mistakes, for example, weather alerts are turned on with “Storage/Stored Memories/Alert" button, not the "Lock/Set” button that the manual says to use. There is no table of contents and the PDF version of the manual on the Raddy website is NOT searchable. Finding something in the manual is tedious.FM Frequency Range and MW step is a combined setting described on page 18 of the User’s Manual. The setting is made in “time mode.” If the radio is on, turn it off, and of the radio is off, turn it on to enter “time mode.” Press and hold CH+ for 2 seconds to enter the selection mode, then use the arrow keys to scroll through the options until arriving at “87” and then press CH+ again to save the setting. My radio came already set correctly for North America.The radio is loud. It should prove acceptable listening, although there is not much bass response. I tried a pair of quality monitor headphones and the result was unimpressive, still no bass and the result seemed a bit tinny. I note that the equalizer feature works with radio.It’s sort of a bummer that the flashlight can’t be turned on in Weather Alert mode because all the buttons are disabled i that mode.The radio doesn't get many MW stations in my low-signal area. There was something odd with FM. As I scanned the band, there was a bit of hiss on the empty channels, but then there would be dead silence and the LEVEL display would be half way across the display or more. I got out another radio to make sure there was no real station there, and there wasn’t. There were a total of 6 frequencies with this characteristic.The telescopic antenna (what the manual calls the “straight pull antenna”) is not even a foot long. Given that the radio ships with an external antenna, it makes sense to me to test the radio that way.So I went out around 2:30 PM local time when reception is generally poor. I clipped on my 20 ft. wire up a tree antenna in my central Virginia location and did a band scan. It stored 36 stations, most of which were something real. Radio Exterior de España on 17.855, was very good. CHU in Canada on 7850 was very good. The scan didn’t store WWV on any frequency, but manually I found the 20 MHz signal good.Bluetooth connected quickly and with no hassle to my Windows computer, and worked as a Bluetooth speaker.The first thing I noticed is that a short press of the Power button acts as a mute for the radio. This is very convenient feature when comparing to radios, just push the mute button on both radios to instantly switch between them.Shortwave coverage is from 3.2 – 21.95 MHz. That’s 3,750 5 kHz shortwave channels. The options are to press the arrow key thousands of times, press and hold an arrow key for a faster scan, use the Meter button to skip through the bands, to 4.75, 5.60, 9.90, 12.10, 13.87, 15.80, 17.90 or 21.85, or use auto tune storage (ATS) and let the radio scan the bands and pick up likely stations. If the up and down arrow buttons are long pressed, sometimes they go into really fast forward mode. I haven’t found how to make it work reliably.There are 99 ATS memory locations for each band, for a total of 396 (no ATS on the weather band of course). An ATS scan on shortwave took 6:07, noting that it scanned from 3.2 – 21.95 MHz continuously, not just the international broadcast frequencies. The only listenable station that it found was Radio Exterior de España on 17.855.Meh. Really inexpensive but mediocre radio. It’s too big for a pocket radio, and it really needs direct frequency entry if it’s going to be that big. FM sensitivity should be better. The flashlight is good and the speaker is loud. I have better radios. I donated this one to charity.
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