Home
Tabletop Radios
HD Radio Blog
HD Receivers
HD car radios
Sangean HD Radios
HD Radio Reviews
HD Stations
Where to Buy
HD2 Channels
HD Radio Texting
HD Signal Coverage
HD Radio Technology
HD Radio Update
Shop for Receivers
HD Radio Articles
Gadget News
Contact us

XML RSS
Add to My Yahoo!
Add to My MSN
Add to Google
 

Visteon HD Pulse Radio Reviewed

Kathy Lu of PC World magazine recently wrote a review of the Visteon HD Pulse Radio. Here are her most important comments.

"The tissue-box-size Pulse is petite enough to fit on a nightstand, and with its wood finish, it's cute. The six-line display shows readable blue text on a black background; but unless you have superb vision, you'll probably need to move in closer to read smaller verbiage, such as the song and artist names (provided that the station you're listening to is streaming that info). The screen displays an HD logo whenever you've hit "upon a digital radio station (if you're not on a digital "station, it plays the analog AM or FM feed), and it also shows the signal strength in the form of a set of bars.

Visteon HD Pulse Radio Manual Tuning

"Controls are well organized, with a giant silver tuning knob occupying a good chunk of space. Pushing the knob seeks out the next station, pushing and holding it performs a fast seek, and turning it tunes manually. The knob is rather loose, though, so hitting the right mark can be a challenge; you may end up accidentally tuning in to Carrie Underwood instead of Kanye West.

"But that's a minor grievance. I have bigger ones. First off, you can program only five FM and five AM channels, a pittance. Furthermore, if you set a multicast channel as a preset, the radio defaults to the main channel before tuning to the secondary one a few seconds later. (This occurs only with presets--you can tune in to the second or third channels as you would any other station, just by moving the dial, without any delay.) And once in a while it refused to flip at all. Visteon says both of these issues are a result of the way HD Radio technology works, not the radio itself.

"Sound feels one-dimensional"

"Also, the Visteon HD Pulse radio comes with but a single speaker. Sure, that speaker offers great fidelity, but without stereo separation, the overall sound feels one-dimensional. (The company says it plans to sell a second speaker or subwoofer that you can purchase separately, but these were not available at press time.) At least you can tweak the bass and treble using the built-in EQ controls.

"On the upside, the Pulse includes a handy sleep timer that will turn the radio off after 90 minutes or less, plus dual alarms with customizable snooze (1 to 60 minutes). You also get an aux-in port for connecting an MP3 player, as well as line-out and headphone jacks. The bubble-buttoned remote is kind of ugly, but since its controls mimic those on the unit, you can accomplish just about anything from a horizontal position.

"All in all, the Pulse makes an adequate vehicle for digital radio, though you may get frustrated with some of its shortcomings."

Click here to go to our home page


footer for visteon hd pulse radio page