This thing has been shown so much everywhere now and i can actually see why. Especially when you see how cheap this radio is being sold. I got one myself (silver looks even better than on the photos) and this thing surprised me a lot. Not just regarding built quality (it feels pretty sturdy) but for a DSP based radio the scanning is really super fast. The audio-gaps between each step of tuning, when you tune this thing, are super short and you can actually get a sorta Analog tuning experience on it. So THIS is really how a DSP based radio should be. It also seems to be really sensitive even with that regular antenna. Medium Wave also works fantastic. Soundwise i still kinda prefer the Tecsun PLL-398MP and DR920C but i'd definitely take the D-219 with me when i don't wanna bring a more expensive radio. I got mine for around 10 bucks, which is so far the best of the cheapest radios i ever got. if you can't get anything else (the smaller Tecsun Models seem to disappear slowly) this model is actually very recommendable. Especially when try powering it with Solar Panels and powerbanks, because of its 5V DC input. I much more prefer radios that run on standard AA batteries rather than these stupid Lithium batteries.
Just ordered one of these from Amazon, with a $2 coupon, too - bringing it down to $15.98 CAD. I haven't dabbled with any SWL since probably back in the 80s on an old Radio Shack/Realistic (probably) radio my uncle had with two antennas sticking out of it. I remember having hours of fun with it. Looking forward to starting again!
Just received my XHDATA D 219 yesterday. What a great little radio. The build is nice, the speaker is a go and the reception here in Huntington Beach Ca. is solid. Amazon as of 042924 was onder $10 delicered next day.
XHData now make two versions of this radio for 9kHz and 10kHz spacing on AM. The tell is that if the AM channel markings go from 522 to 1620 it’s the 9kHz model. If markings go from 520 to 1710 it’s the 10kHz model…
Agreed, D-219 AM (MW) is weak, FM is OK , but I have other radios for those bands. The shortwave, for that way cheap price is great. I like the old fashioned AA batteries too. A lot of under thirties don't seem to even know what shortwave is. This radio works so well on shortwave for the price , its radio to introduce them shortwave. I have been comparing the D-219 to a Tecsun PL-606, Grundig RK709 and Grundig Mini 300. The D-219 is the most enjoyable to listen to out of the set. Gil, when you move again, you have to move very far away from that FM radio station.
I really wish they had provided a dial light instead of the little power indicator. I'm seriously tempted to modify mine. It looks like it should be simple enough to do.
Just received this via XHDATA (through their US shipping partner) . D219 model. Tuning is a little different because it is an analog style “dial pointer” powered by a DSP chip inside, which means you have tune more slowly that you would expect. The receipt says “XHDATA US” and this one does appear to have the 10kHz spacing for North America on AM/Medium Wave. The dial pointer is a little off on all bands but not much so if you are pretty familiar with station reception in your area or can compare it with another radio, then it should not be a problem.The sensitivity seems pretty good although not quite as good as the D109. It’s still better than what I expected.
I have this radio. Still deciding on what my next radio will be. I ordered a PL 330 but it was stolen. Things I want: Type-C or coaxial adapter charging Lithium ion rechargeable (preferably 18650 over Bl-5) or AA compatibility. Not a deal breaker 1711 - 29999 coverage Airband or DSS.. both would be preferable but I'm on a budget The build quality of the D-219 or better Equally sensitive on all bands External antenna jack Audio quality of the D-109 (which I'm leaning towards) Sihuadon R-108 is also a contender.. skeptical of its build quality though
You mentioned FM STEREO audio through earplugs. This is purely an FM MONO radio. Through stereo earplugs you get the same MONO audio output on both ears. Just to clarify things.
@@JohnUsp I have a radio with mono (one side only). To correct that, you'll need to buy an audio adapter to feed the mono signal to both sides. Readily available, but just complicates things.
Hej Gill thanks for the review yes I also have the XHDATA D-219 it is a nice low cost radio and it is a very sensitive and it has nice reception here where I live but what is a bit of a shame is, that the MW (AM) channel is set permanently at 9 kHz if you live in Europe good but not so good if you live in North and South Amerika. So I would like to see an upgraded XHDATA D-219 model with a switch for 9kHz/10kHz am band and I would like to have a little more shortwave bands but then it would cost more i would pay more for that. I like that it also has quite a long antenna for a small pocket radio but otherwise the XHDATA D-219 is a nice radio a good little kitchen radio or to take with you when you're on the go when you just want a radio for fm and some shortwave listening take Gill and have a pleasant day.
Is this radio adjustable for 9/10 kHz tuning for the MW? I have heard that it has a 9 kHz bandwidth spacing. I saw another video on this radio telling me that it is an analogue radio. I thought it has a DSP.
I live in a suburban location, around 20 miles from the closest FM station and I don't notice any FM breakthrough on my D-219. The reason I rarely use this radio (after an initial fling) is that I have better radios. It doesn't bring anything special to the table.
I bought a second one (May/2024). This is a 10K AM USA version, and a huge improvement. I use it for AM news/talk in the morning. The battery life should be excellent as there are no presets or clock to add drain. The first one was likely a 9K overseas version which is why I didn't keep it. Overall a keeper! Great video.
This thing has been shown so much everywhere now and i can actually see why. Especially when you see how cheap this radio is being sold. I got one myself (silver looks even better than on the photos) and this thing surprised me a lot. Not just regarding built quality (it feels pretty sturdy) but for a DSP based radio the scanning is really super fast. The audio-gaps between each step of tuning, when you tune this thing, are super short and you can actually get a sorta Analog tuning experience on it. So THIS is really how a DSP based radio should be. It also seems to be really sensitive even with that regular antenna. Medium Wave also works fantastic. Soundwise i still kinda prefer the Tecsun PLL-398MP and DR920C but i'd definitely take the D-219 with me when i don't wanna bring a more expensive radio. I got mine for around 10 bucks, which is so far the best of the cheapest radios i ever got. if you can't get anything else (the smaller Tecsun Models seem to disappear slowly) this model is actually very recommendable. Especially when try powering it with Solar Panels and powerbanks, because of its 5V DC input. I much more prefer radios that run on standard AA batteries rather than these stupid Lithium batteries.
Actually a killer radio! I just picked one up for $6.11… stoked how great it sounds. When night came it started picking up SW. 73!
I own one. I consider it a very above average performance compared to ANALOG & DSP mini shortwave radios I have.
I highly recommend
Just ordered one of these from Amazon, with a $2 coupon, too - bringing it down to $15.98 CAD. I haven't dabbled with any SWL since probably back in the 80s on an old Radio Shack/Realistic (probably) radio my uncle had with two antennas sticking out of it. I remember having hours of fun with it. Looking forward to starting again!
Just received my XHDATA D 219 yesterday. What a great little radio. The build is nice, the speaker is a go and the reception here in Huntington Beach Ca. is solid. Amazon as of 042924 was onder $10 delicered next day.
XHData now make two versions of this radio for 9kHz and 10kHz spacing on AM. The tell is that if the AM channel markings go from 522 to 1620 it’s the 9kHz model. If markings go from 520 to 1710 it’s the 10kHz model…
As a noobie I appreciate the heads up on te difference. I just received the 10khz model yesterday and. Amaon is delivering my Tecsun 680 today. TY
Thank you.
Just bought one today on Amazon for 8.98 after 8% off coupon . I like the 10 hz steps .
Agreed, D-219 AM (MW) is weak, FM is OK , but I have other radios for those bands. The shortwave, for that way cheap price is great. I like the old fashioned AA batteries too. A lot of under thirties don't seem to even know what shortwave is. This radio works so well on shortwave for the price , its radio to introduce them shortwave. I have been comparing the D-219 to a Tecsun PL-606, Grundig RK709 and Grundig Mini 300. The D-219 is the most enjoyable to listen to out of the set. Gil, when you move again, you have to move very far away from that FM radio station.
the AM is perhaps weak if youre using AM with 10khz steps and the radio is stepping in 9khz, but D-219 how comes in 10khz steps for north america.
I've got one and it rocks !!!
Does great on mw too.
I really wish they had provided a dial light instead of the little power indicator. I'm seriously tempted to modify mine. It looks like it should be simple enough to do.
Just received this via XHDATA (through their US shipping partner) .
D219 model. Tuning is a little different because it is an analog style “dial pointer” powered by a DSP chip inside, which means you have tune more slowly that you would expect. The receipt says “XHDATA US” and this one does appear to have the 10kHz spacing for North America on AM/Medium Wave. The dial pointer is a little off on all bands but not much so if you are pretty familiar with station reception in your area or can compare it with another radio, then it should not be a problem.The sensitivity seems pretty good although not quite as good as the D109. It’s still better than what I expected.
If the AM band starts at 520 khz, then it's 10khz spacing for US. If it starts at 522 khz, it's 9khz for foreign markets.
I have this radio. Still deciding on what my next radio will be. I ordered a PL 330 but it was stolen.
Things I want:
Type-C or coaxial adapter charging
Lithium ion rechargeable (preferably 18650 over Bl-5) or AA compatibility. Not a deal breaker
1711 - 29999 coverage
Airband or DSS.. both would be preferable but I'm on a budget
The build quality of the D-219 or better
Equally sensitive on all bands
External antenna jack
Audio quality of the D-109 (which I'm leaning towards)
Sihuadon R-108 is also a contender.. skeptical of its build quality though
I have not noticed any FM breakthrough on SW at all this far
You mentioned FM STEREO audio through earplugs. This is purely an FM MONO radio. Through stereo earplugs you get the same MONO audio output on both ears. Just to clarify things.
Really?! this is weird
@@JohnUsp I have a radio with mono (one side only). To correct that, you'll need to buy an audio adapter to feed the mono signal to both sides. Readily available, but just complicates things.
Hej Gill thanks for the review yes I also have the XHDATA D-219 it is a nice low cost radio and it is a very sensitive and it has nice reception here where I live but what is a bit of a shame is, that the MW (AM) channel is set permanently at 9 kHz if you live in Europe good but not so good if you live in North and South Amerika. So I would like to see an upgraded XHDATA D-219 model with a switch for 9kHz/10kHz am band and I would like to have a little more shortwave bands but then it would cost more i would pay more for that. I like that it also has quite a long antenna for a small pocket radio but otherwise the XHDATA D-219 is a nice radio a good little kitchen radio or to take with you when you're on the go when you just want a radio for fm and some shortwave listening take Gill and have a pleasant day.
??? But it's a continuous tuning "analog-style" radio. Why would you need 9/10kHz selection?
The one I received today had the 10kHz spacing
Is this radio adjustable for 9/10 kHz tuning for the MW? I have heard that it has a 9 kHz bandwidth spacing. I saw another video on this radio telling me that it is an analogue radio. I thought it has a DSP.
No, they are fixed at 9 khz, however, in the USA(which uses 10 khz steps), this radio works fine anyway, so this is not a major issue
and yes, it's a DSP design
It definitely is DSP.
This is a DSP radio
@@OfficialSWLchannel thank you for your reply and information.
Thanks for detailed review!
XHDATA D-219 vrs TECSUN R-9012 which is better for MW and SW reception? Please reply Sir!
I live in a suburban location, around 20 miles from the closest FM station and I don't notice any FM breakthrough on my D-219. The reason I rarely use this radio (after an initial fling) is that I have better radios. It doesn't bring anything special to the table.
Bought one and it's pretty cheap. Good first radio for 8-10 year old child.
I bought a second one (May/2024). This is a 10K AM USA version, and a huge improvement. I use it for AM news/talk in the morning. The battery life should be excellent as there are no presets or clock to add drain. The first one was likely a 9K overseas version which is why I didn't keep it. Overall a keeper! Great video.
Is the 5v input there for the purpose of charging AA batteries?
No, it won't charge. The battery life is so good that you wouldn't need it.
Ola, as duas versão desse radio 9khz e 10khz e DSP?
No stereo ouput even with ear buds, otherwise a great radio for $7.30 w shipping.