Satellite Radio

   / Satellite Radio #21  
I keep saying that I'm going to get it... The place which I rented the last couple of winters has Dish, including the basic XM stations, the latter is about all I'll tune in. Willie's Roadhouse is about the only country station I'll listen to, plus the various classic rock stations.

When my company trucks came with XM I never found reception to be that good. Mountains, trees, sometimes snowstorms would block the signal. I've been told that the external recievers don't have that problem; any comments?

I had an external antenna on my car's Sirius radio. Never had an issue, even in the worst weather. That includes a huge snowstorm in Dallas many years ago-dumped at least 12 inches. I remember it was near Christmas and I was driving to Northern Tool near Fort Worth listening to old radio shows doing their Christmas episodes.

The only time I recall losing coverage was under a long underpass/bridge, but that's about it.
 
   / Satellite Radio #22  
I think I would only mess with Sat radio if I was an over the road trucker. With T-mobile, you get unlimited streaming to pretty much all of internet music streams (pandora, spotify, itunes, google music, etc) I use Pandora, the free version. I get a 30 second comercial 4-5 times an hour. I listen to various stuff pretty much all day at work. This has turned out to be a great option for me, I even installed bluetooth units in all our cars. There are apps, that will start your steam as soon as it connects, Pretty cool!
Food for thought, Dave
 
   / Satellite Radio #23  
XM6
orig.gif


SR
 
   / Satellite Radio #24  
I've got a Sirius Stiletto (sp?) that I've had for several years and have a mount for it on my tractor, and have bases for it in my house and in my shop. I've also got another base that I've used in vehicles when we are going on trips.

I really do like it, primarily in the fall to listen to college and pro football while I'm either working outside (tractor is my portable radio) or bush hogging on the tractor.

My only complain is that it appears as though I'm the only person on the planet that they will not cut a deal with. I don't auto renew my subscription, and every year when it runs out, I receive and email or phone call to re-up. When I act disinterested, they just say "sorry to hear that. Have a nice day." No hard sale, no offers, no nothing. I've waited up to two weeks and still nothing, so I end up re-signing up again.

For as much as I use it, I don't think it's a bad deal, but it's all contingent on how much it's used. When I got my setup initially, I think I was out about $250 to $300 for the radio and the first base for it. The other bases I have picked up off ebay or craigslist for cheap, though.

Good luck and take care.
 
   / Satellite Radio #25  
One other piece of advice.....when you sign up tell them you don't have a credit card and that you will pay by check from an invoice. They will send you one and will not be able to outo renew on your CC. Savces the step of cancelling on your own etc......
 
   / Satellite Radio #26  
Again, just tell them you don't want it to auto-renew. Problem solved.
 
   / Satellite Radio #27  
I think I would only mess with Sat radio if I was an over the road trucker.

Same here, though I don't listen to streams either. I guess I'm one of those poor unfortunate souls who's perfectly content with FM. I do have a Sandisk mp3 player I use sometimes.
 
   / Satellite Radio #28  
I always said the same, until it came in my wife’s car. I’m still too cheap to pay for it in my truck, but I love when I have to drive her car. I can flip on Willies Roadhouse and hear songs I haven’t heard for years. There’s no longer any classic country stations around here, it’s the only way I can hear the music I like.
 
   / Satellite Radio #29  
For me, the benefit of satellite radio is that you can get it in the country. There's almost no radio signal at my cabin -- except for one AM station that is highly focused on Penn State football -- and there's very little you can pick up for the last hour of the trip. So XM has been a real breakthrough for me. Plus I love about dozen of the stations and like a dozen more. Check out some of the more obscure channels [like Canadian adult alternative] just to see what's out there.
 
   / Satellite Radio #30  
It was great for the first couple of years. Then the programming became repetitive on my favorite stations. I was about to cancel when overnight they seemed to widen their playlists. After my road trip/vacation in April I dropped it. It slid back into the old ways. On the hard rock stations you would think they only had 50 albums to play songs off of. I dropped it.
 
   / Satellite Radio #31  
It was great for the first couple of years. Then the programming became repetitive on my favorite stations. I was about to cancel when overnight they seemed to widen their playlists. After my road trip/vacation in April I dropped it. It slid back into the old ways. On the hard rock stations you would think they only had 50 albums to play songs off of. I dropped it.
That was certainly true about the "Underground Garage" channel back when I had it. To me an "underground" station gives airtime for artists who otherwise wouldn't get played.

The Beatles don't quite fit that criteria.
 
   / Satellite Radio #33  
I can't stomach cousin brucy... I hope that dipstick didn't multiply!!

SR
 
   / Satellite Radio #34  
Same here, though I don't listen to streams either. I guess I'm one of those poor unfortunate souls who's perfectly content with FM. I do have a Sandisk mp3 player I use sometimes.

Me too. In the morning, I listen to a very funny morning drive time show. In the afternoon I am talking to the wife on hands free phone or listening to the radio. I can't justify sat radio. Heck I need a new radio in the truck since the volume dial is wonky but I can't justify the little bit of money to buy a new stereo. :laughing::laughing::laughing: If we are on a trip, we download a podcast and listen to that on the trip.

I had thought about getting a sat radio if the morning drive time show was carried but it is not. The signal starts to get iffy as I get close to work and I would pay to receive the broad cast. :shocked:

Later,
Dan
 
   / Satellite Radio #35  
I used to really like the bluegrass channel on XM. It was about the only channel we listened to on our frequent trips from GA to TN. When Sirius bought them out, they added "DJs", a bunch of "shows", and started playing a lot of what I call "tinky-tink" music recorded in the 40s and 50s with old guys singing through their noses. Just totally ruined it.
 
   / Satellite Radio #37  
... old guys singing through their noses. Just totally ruined it.

Are you dissing George Jones? The biggest nose singer of all time.

Never heard of nose singing...

Just tried to sing through my nose...

Now my keyboard is a real mess...

:confused3::shocked::rolleyes::laughing::laughing::laughing:

Thanks guys.
Dan
 
   / Satellite Radio #38  
I used to really like the bluegrass channel on XM. It was about the only channel we listened to on our frequent trips from GA to TN. When Sirius bought them out, they added "DJs", a bunch of "shows", and started playing a lot of what I call "tinky-tink" music recorded in the 40s and 50s with old guys singing through their noses. Just totally ruined it.

Are you talking about the likes of Bill Monroe, Flatt and Scruggs, Jimmy Martin, Reno and Smiley, the Stanley Brothers, the Lonesome Pine Fiddlers, Jim and Jesse, etc. ?

If so, I prefer "tinky-tink" to some of what passes for bluegrass today.

De gustibus non est disputandum.:)

Steve
 
Last edited:
   / Satellite Radio #39  
I can't stomach cousin brucy... I hope that dipstick didn't multiply!!

Is he still around? Sheesh, he's gotta be pushing 80, I remember him on WABC in New York when I was a teenager. Thought he was annoying then too.
 
   / Satellite Radio #40  
Are you talking about the likes of Bill Monroe, Flatt and Scruggs, Jimmy Martin, Reno and Smiley, the Stanley Brothers, the Lonesome Pine Fiddlers, Jim and Jesse, etc. ?

If so, I prefer "tinky-tink" to some of what passes for bluegrass today.

De gustibus non est disputandum.:)

Steve

I agree. The Sirius/XM bluegrass channel thinks anything with a banjo is bluegrass. I happen to like innovative uses of the banjo in contemporary music but that isn't bluegrass.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2018 LARK UNITED MANUFACTURING S/A GUARD SHACK (A58214)
2018 LARK UNITED...
CATERPILLAR 255 SKID STEER (A52709)
CATERPILLAR 255...
Unused 2025 CFG Industrial XZ20R Mini Excavator (A59228)
Unused 2025 CFG...
2024 CATERPILLAR 259D3 SKID STEER (A60429)
2024 CATERPILLAR...
Crown RM6025-45 4,500 LB Stand-On Electric Forklift (A59228)
Crown RM6025-45...
John Deere 4600 (A53317)
John Deere 4600...
 
Top