C Crane Skywave SSB

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K2KOH

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Just got mine today from HRO. Cute little radio, and it's perfect for throwing in my bag when I travel. Will give it a good workout next time Igo upstate
 

KB2GOM

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Rensselaer County New York
Here are my initial impressions from a while back:

There’s a tendency, on viewing the CCrane Skywave SSB for the first time, to say something like, “Awwww, it’s so cute!” It measures just 3 inches high by 5 inches wide by about an inch thick and weighs just ounces. It’s so small that it will actually slide into the chest pocket of one of my flannel shirts with a bit of room to spare. It seems, well, almost toy-like.

A thought comes to mind: can something so small actually perform well? Further, it ought to perform well for the price, right?

Jay of www.radiojayallen.com calls the Skywave SSB “the Swiss Army Knife of radio,” and the moniker fits: it covers FM 87.5 – 108.0 Mhz, AM 520-1710 kHz, WX channels 1-7, AIR 118-137 MHz, and SW 1711-29999 kHz.

But despite its diminutive size, the CCrane Skywave SSB is a serious radio. It does everything advertised on the box; it does them pretty darn well, and in my mind so far at least, it’s worth the money.

What I really enjoy about the Skywave SSB is that it is small enough to hold in my lap and cruise the bands to what’s out there, and it is simply great fun.

I found some happy surprises.


  • In the wee hours of the morning, I was tuning through the MW AM band with both the Skywave SSB and the 2E (both on their internal antennas), found a barely audible station, and found that I could actually hear it better with the Skywave SSB because of the selection of bandwidths that I could access on the SSB. Note: I am not asserting that the SSB will outperform the 2E in all circumstances, but it’s nice to know that it did in at least this one instance.
  • The WX (NOAA weather channel) performance appears to be as good on the Skywave SSB as on the 2E. There is also a weather radio alert function that is easy to engage.
  • The SSB has a scan feature that works on AM, FM, SW bands, and even works for scanning the ham bands in SSB mode. If you scan the HF frequencies in AM mode, the radio will jump from one international shortwave band to another. If you scan in SSB mode, the radio jumps from one international ham band to another and automatically switches from USB to LSB as appropriate.
  • At first, I thought the Skywave SSB might be relatively deaf on the ham bands, but then I checked the ham bands with my Grundig Satellit 800 and heard nothing there as well. So I hooked up the reel-up shortwave antenna that comes with the Skywave SSB, clipping it to the SSB’s whip antenna, and was soon happily listening to hams chatting on the 40 meters band.
Further, the ergonomics of the SSB are pretty darn good, and the manual is clear, well written, and obviously written by someone who actually enjoys radios and gives a hoot about the user.

Interestingly, the Skywave SSB treats single-sideband as a separate band. Right below the display it says: AM, FM, WX, AIR, SW, SSB. There is a separate button to engage SSB mode (there is a tiny LED that lights when SSB is active) and yet another button to select LSB/USB. If you want to fine-tune the signal, there is another button, with light, for that. SSB also works on the MW band.

There is also a one-page “Quickstart Guide for SSB” that I think is just terrific, and the introduction to the manual provides a very brief overview of some of the things you might be able to hear while using the Skywave SSB. Well done, CCrane!

Years ago, I had a conversation with Tom Kneitel, editor of PopComm. He said he saw his job as “10 percent telling people how to do something, and 90 percent selling the romance of doing it at all.”

There is a lot more that could be said about the Skywave SSB, and I certainly recommend radiojayallen’s review: C.Crane CC Skywave SSB Radio

My initial impression is that the CCrane Skywave SSB is really enjoyable tool for engaging “the romance” of scanning the airwaves.
here’s a tendency, on viewing the CCrane Skywave SSB for the first time, to say something like, “Awwww, it’s so cute!” It measures just 3 inches high by 5 inches wide by about an inch thick and weighs just ounces. It’s so small that it will actually slide into the chest pocket of one of my flannel shirts with a bit of room to spare. It seems, well, almost toy-like.

A thought comes to mind: can something so small actually perform well? Further, it ought to perform well for the price, right?

Jay of www.radiojayallen.com calls the Skywave SSB “the Swiss Army Knife of radio,” and the moniker fits: it covers FM 87.5 – 108.0 Mhz, AM 520-1710 kHz, WX channels 1-7, AIR 118-137 MHz, and SW 1711-29999 kHz.

But despite its diminutive size, the CCrane Skywave SSB is a serious radio. It does everything advertised on the box; it does them pretty darn well, and in my mind so far at least, it’s worth the money.

What I really enjoy about the Skywave SSB is that it is small enough to hold in my lap and cruise the bands to what’s out there, and it is simply great fun.

I found some happy surprises.


  • In the wee hours of the morning, I was tuning through the MW AM band with both the Skywave SSB and the 2E (both on their internal antennas), found a barely audible station, and found that I could actually hear it better with the Skywave SSB because of the selection of bandwidths that I could access on the SSB. Note: I am not asserting that the SSB will outperform the 2E in all circumstances, but it’s nice to know that it did in at least this one instance.
  • The WX (NOAA weather channel) performance appears to be as good on the Skywave SSB as on the 2E. There is also a weather radio alert function that is easy to engage.
  • The SSB has a scan feature that works on AM, FM, SW bands, and even works for scanning the ham bands in SSB mode. If you scan the HF frequencies in AM mode, the radio will jump from one international shortwave band to another. If you scan in SSB mode, the radio jumps from one international ham band to another and automatically switches from USB to LSB as appropriate.
  • At first, I thought the Skywave SSB might be relatively deaf on the ham bands, but then I checked the ham bands with my Grundig Satellit 800 and heard nothing there as well. So I hooked up the reel-up shortwave antenna that comes with the Skywave SSB, clipping it to the SSB’s whip antenna, and was soon happily listening to hams chatting on the 40 meters band.
Further, the ergonomics of the SSB are pretty darn good, and the manual is clear, well written, and obviously written by someone who actually enjoys radios and gives a hoot about the user.

Interestingly, the Skywave SSB treats single-sideband as a separate band. Right below the display it says: AM, FM, WX, AIR, SW, SSB. There is a separate button to engage SSB mode (there is a tiny LED that lights when SSB is active) and yet another button to select LSB/USB. If you want to fine-tune the signal, there is another button, with light, for that. SSB also works on the MW band.

There is also a one-page “Quickstart Guide for SSB” that I think is just terrific, and the introduction to the manual provides a very brief overview of some of the things you might be able to hear while using the Skywave SSB. Well done, CCrane!

Years ago, I had a conversation with Tom Kneitel, editor of PopComm. He said he saw his job as “10 percent telling people how to do something, and 90 percent selling the romance of doing it at all.”

There is a lot more that could be said about the Skywave SSB, and I certainly recommend radiojayallen’s review: C.Crane CC Skywave SSB Radio

My initial impression is that the CCrane Skywave SSB is really enjoyable tool for engaging “the romance” of scanning the airwaves.
 

K2KOH

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Premium Subscriber
Joined
Jul 30, 2001
Messages
2,767
Location
Putnam County, NY
Nice review!!! I've only played around a bit with it so far since I have so much crap noise in my condo..I bought it for my frequent trips to upstate New York. I too was pleasantly surprised by the radio, despite the noise in here. Thank you for writing this!
 

Echo4Thirty

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Location
Spring,TX
i love mine as well. i need to dig it out and use it more. Has anyone used the longer antenna that came with it?
 

Dirk_SDR

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Jan 3, 2022
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323
Location
Germany
What about the D-808?
Similar features as the Skywave SSB plus LW, recharcheable battery ...
Any experiences with this receiver?
 
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KB2GOM

Active Member
Joined
Jun 1, 2020
Messages
683
Location
Rensselaer County New York
Just got mine today from HRO. Cute little radio, and it's perfect for throwing in my bag when I travel. Will give it a good workout next time Igo upstate

Some additional stuff for CCrane Skywave SSB users:



A couple of things that might prove useful:



The ultimate accessory (it costs more than the radio!): Jock reviews the BHI Compact In-Line Noise Eliminating Module

A hard-core radio nerd story: Jock satisfies his inner radio nerd with a deeper dive into NOAA weather radio
 

Patch42

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Joined
Feb 14, 2008
Messages
372
Interesting. I have run into the different channel ordering on different radios but didn't know the reason for it.

Despite the author's concern, he is not alone in having a bit of a fascination with trying to pull in more distant NOAA WX stations. I can pretty consistently get five different stations here, with a sixth being a bit less consistent. With my CCR2E, I can sometimes null one of the regulars and pull in a slightly more distant station. I'd love to get a directional antenna and a rotor high up on the roof but that seems a bit extreme just to hear distant NOAA stations.
 

KB2GOM

Active Member
Joined
Jun 1, 2020
Messages
683
Location
Rensselaer County New York
Interesting. I have run into the different channel ordering on different radios but didn't know the reason for it.

Despite the author's concern, he is not alone in having a bit of a fascination with trying to pull in more distant NOAA WX stations. I can pretty consistently get five different stations here, with a sixth being a bit less consistent. With my CCR2E, I can sometimes null one of the regulars and pull in a slightly more distant station. I'd love to get a directional antenna and a rotor high up on the roof but that seems a bit extreme just to hear distant NOAA stations.

Good to know I'm not alone. I've wondered what could be done with a small yagi and a trip to a mountaintop. I've found both the CCR2E and Skywave SSB do pretty well with NOAA weather stations.

Thanks for the feedback!
 
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