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176 of 185 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Why am I the Power Manager?,
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
I must confess this was a bit of an impulse buy. I already owned theDC911 radio/charger, but had been driven crazy by the knob tuning, and really liked the idea of being able to keep my MP3 player with the unit.
When using the DC911, it's always been nice to just grab the radio, walk wherever you're going to work, and carry your music with you. There are plenty of times I know I don't need to recharge a battery, but just want to listen to my tunes while I work. The DC911 gave this to me, and would run seemingly forever before needing another charge. When I plugged it in, the battery charge was fast. A worker friend had won the Milwaukee version of this product. The digital tuning was great. The presets were very convenient. The fact the Milwaukee product is not also a charger is brain dead. I looked forward to DeWalt catching up with the digital features, though. When the DC011 showed up, I gladly took the plunge. What I have discovered after a month of use is that this radio is nothing short of frustrating from a feature standpoint. The digital tuning is convenient, but the presets have proven to be useless. Why? Because they are far too volatile. As another reviewer pointed out, the unit will exhaust a freshly charged DeWalt battery in 50 hours or less. What that means is that your radio will be dead if you leave it in your truck over Labor Day weekend, or even Monday morning if you were to unplug it early on Friday. To counter this, you find yourself consciously thinking about taking the NiCad battery out of the radio every time you put it away in your truck. Oh, but that it were that simple! After a week of doing just that, I found that the two AA batteries were now dead, safely taking my presets with them! I performed this test twice, not quite believing the first set of results. The silly thing is that the only thing the batteries are really trying to do while the unit is both turned off and unplugged is save the presets (why aren't they in a small chip of NVRAM?) and display the digital clock. Why that burns through a set of AA batteries in a week is beyond me. What I find I have done is move from a nice unit (the DC911) that can be characterized as a portable radio that just happens to be a battery charger over to a frustrating unit (the DC011) that is a battery charger that just happens to be a radio. If you leave the unit plugged in at all - and I mean ALL - times, you have good functionality. If you unplug the unit for a short time, you have adequate functionality. If you unplug the unit for a weekend, you're going to be quite disappointed when you return to it on Monday. My best recourse at this time is to just remove the AA batteries, forget the presets, totally ignore the clock (which most couldn't care less about, anyway), tune it manually when in use, and take the battery out of the unit when I turn it off and put it in the truck. I am now playing the role of power management for a product that has less power management complexities than laptops that have been managing this problem effectively for over a decade. Sadly, I expected better engineering from DeWalt than this.
52 of 54 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Battery Drain,
By The Schreib (Evansville, IN United States) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
I have found out that if you leave the unit unplugged for more than fifty hours, with the radio off it will discharge the Dewalt battery. In my case I use an 18 Volt battery. I e-mailed Dewalt with no answer and finally called the 1-800 number and did talk to a customer service rep. Dewalt claims that it states in the directions the battery will discharge if left in the radio/charger due to supporting the memory and that they have been receiving calls on the issue. I find it amusing that two "AA" batteries will support the memory for an extended period of time but an 18-volt battery discharges after 50 hours. You do the math. I thought the reason you purchased a battery operated radio was to use it when no power was available or during a power outage in my case.
This radio does have great sound and enough range to handle most job sites. I do like gadgets and this is a simple but effective design. They use two search functions to find stations, one by the tune knob and the other by scan function of a push button. It has three modes of operation, FM, AM, and Aux for CD player or other device. They also added a removable hard case holder, which could be used for a CD player to one of the handles, and it comes in handy for my MP3 player that I connect to the Aux function of the radio. Both the 20 gig player and cord fit into the case. Yes there are a couple of features I wish they would of added, for instance only 4 memory buttons for FM and 4 for AM band is really not enough. A weather Band would have also been nice for contactors on the job site. I bought mine for the workshop but it is in the house and has to stay plugged in. Someone dropped the ball.
37 of 40 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
This is a Dewalt job site radio/charger,
By J.M. "Mr. DIY" (NC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
Let's say it again but make a truer statement, this is a Dewalt... "construction phase"... radio/charger. Just remeber that while reading this.
If you want a home stereo at the job site get the bosch it's got all that stuff on there. I've herd them before they are good, yeh it's a home stereo at the job. Now listen, this thing is really only truly more than a radio if you have dewalt tools (the bat charger in back). When I go to work I run a power cord, it's just something you do in construction. So I plug my radio and tune it to the station I want. If my bat goes dead I ether pull the charged one out (if I left it in there) and put the drained one in and go about my way. Anyone that doesn't do drugs should know if you need to do a lot of work you pull out the corded tool or make do with what you have. I've never really had a problem with reception (though I'm also never really that far from a city normally). The quality of the sound is actually pretty good (for what it is), there's not much deep bass, but probly as it dose not have a low Hz range. The sound is clear enough to enjoy and at the job (even at loud volumes) with the various sounds that happen there that's all you need. I don't do the kind of work where I have time to sit and enjoy music... It dose have an AUX for all your gizmo's to plug into so it's not like you can't bring songs with the F word to work ;) I like it simple for the fact of the built in charger, it's convenient as heck plus you can unplug it and bring the tunes where ever you want. I've never played it long enough to drain the bat so I don't have a beef with that. Though when I bring it with me I don't play it loud. I've never really had a need for presets nor anything beyond that. It has stood up to dust (vary heavy at times), light ran, crap falling on it in the van and the general wear and tear you get in a construction environment. Bottom line if you want a nice and tough stereo get the boch, if you have dewalt tools and have a nice system back at your house that you listen too, get the dewalt.
76 of 87 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Dewalt, what were you thinking?!,
By
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
Dewalt, what were you thinking? This thing is way to expensive for a portable radio, and it's way too expensive for a charger, but maybe for the convenience of both together...... However it is severely limited as a portable radio. The batteries run down over the weekend when the thing is turned OFF. It's no good on a job site - at least not for very long. I'll put it in the shop and use it for a VERY expensive plug-in radio, but I have no Dewalt products in the shop so the charger is useless. Dewalt, I expected better from you. Don't get very far from your extension cord with this thing. Not recommended!
31 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Dewalt dropped the ball,
By
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
I purchased the radio/charger for convenince. If your charging a battery forget about reception. If I could return it for no shippng cost, I would in a second. I still use a charger separately so I can listen to the radio. This is the first time I hated a DeWalt product. I'm using it as an expensive radio(poor quality sound) in my shop.
24 of 27 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
looks cool...and that's it!,
By
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
the dc011 looks neat and is undoubtedly durable, however, my new dc011 only picked up 2 radio stations when even my cheap clock radio with no antennae can pick up many times that amount. i used to like dewalt, but their products are getting worse each year. i think they are riding on their success of past years and have pretty much quit trying. i'm going to find another brand to start using.
35 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
DeWalt Missed the Boat on this one,
By
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
I have the first version of the DeWalt Radio and won't think about purchasing another one until DeWalt improves the battery drain issue, reception is horrible and drifts, should have a built in MP3 capable CD-R/DVD-R/DVD+R player. The aux input is a stupid idea. The Bosch unit is much closer to ideal, but all my cordless stuff is DeWalt......I hope DeWalt design teams read this and take it to heart......Do not purchase this unit!
23 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
Bad Radio; Expensive Charger,
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
Radio station seek mode using arrow did not work in one direction; station dial was erratic; label was put on cockeyed (sloppy quality control); not so hot reception with battery. Charger worked good. Exchanged radio for dual charger and pocketed the difference.
17 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Performance of Dewalt Worksite Radio Charger,
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
I thought the design was rather cool and had to check it out. I first compared the side by side in-store performance against the Bosch and Milwaukee at Home Depot. All were able to receive a number of FM stations, but only the DeWalt was able to receive local AM stations inside the store. Reception was not great, but it was there. At home, I found the radio had good AM and FM sensitivity. The AM selectivity is rather poor, however. Local stations are easily received 20 KHz above their broadcast frequency. This is particularly annoying at night, when there are a number of strong signals on adjacent channels.
The seek feature works well, always stopping at the correct frequency from either direction. The manual tuning knob has an annoying habit of sometimes skipping the frequency I want. I applaud Dewalt for the functional simplicity. Maybe twelve memories would be better than eight, but at least you can remember wrere you stored stations. Why have 20 or 30 memories when there are only a few stations worth listening to. Sound quality is superb. There are no tone controls, but I feel the audio has a pleasing balance and frequency response as is. I have not evaluated battery life, but other reviewers have been quite critcal of that issue. If Dewalt could tighten the AM bandwidth and reduce battery drain when the unit is not plugged in, this would be a great radio.
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Cool design, poor performance,
By T. Griffin (Raleigh, NC USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger (Tools & Home Improvement)
Durable and hi-tech design functions well overall, but battery life issues others report are all too real. And, where is the CD player? What were they thinking? Needs a little more work to be a tool I'd want to keep, so mine went back. Hit Wally World on the way back to the jobsite for a <$50 replacement with better sound quality but sans charger. I didn't really need another charger anyway.
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DEWALT DC011 Combination Work Site Radio and 7.2-Volt to 18-Volt Pod-Style Battery Charger by DEWALT
$238.66 $115.99
In Stock | ||