When I was robbed one of the things I lost was my digital radio. When I got round to buying a new (well secondhand) one last week I was delighted to see one on eBay that was identical to the one that was stolen (I prefer "same as before" as there is a "zero learning curve" when using it). Better still it was really cheap, on Sunday it went for the minimum bid price.
It arrived today (they originally tried to deliver it yesterday, but I was at dialysis). It had no instructions (it was secondhand) but no problem, it was the same as the last one, so I do not need no stinking instructions! So I just plugged it in.
First problem: My old one automatically set the time via the DAB signal. This one simply displayed the command "set clock". I tried pressing the buttons at random trying to work out which ones set the clock. None did. So I gave up and switched the radio on.
Second problem: The first radio station gave me a "off air" message. So I tried another, same problem. I tried all of them, only two were broadcasting, all the others were "off air", this seemed unlikely as it was mid afternoon. And the two that were broadcasting were broadcasting the same obscure psychedelic rock song, which was even less likely than all the other stations being off air in the afternoon.
Third problem: When I switched off the radio it no longer said "set clock" it now said "no clock".
Eventually I gave up, unplugged the radio, and left it a while. I tried again later. Same problems. Left it and was going to message the seller when I thought "hold on, I don't want to look stupid, so try pressing all the buttons, several times, and holding them down for a long time, see if that does anything". It did nothing, still the same problems. But the last button I did this to was the menu button, and one option was "re-tune". Looking at that I realized what the problem was.
The seller sent it by post, they lived miles from me. And obviously when they had used the radio they would have tuned it to the radio stations IN
THEIR AREA. In
my area the stations would be on different frequencies.
So I hit the "re-tune" option, it automatically scanned the frequencies, found just under a hundred radio stations in my area, and even the frequency the time signal is broadcast on. So the clock instantly set itself, and all the radio stations were now "on air" when I tried them.
And that should have been blindingly obvious to me. Over here our TV went digital a few years ago, which gave them ten times as many spots to broadcast on and they are still selling the extra frequencies, and re-arranging the existing ones to fit them in. So about once a year I get a "channel not broadcasting" message from my TV and have to re-tune to get all my channels back again (plus the new ones). So when I got the "off air" message from the radio I should have automatically thought "re-tune". But I didn't!
I guess it is finally happening, I'm getting too old to understand modern technology. Soon I'll be posting threads asking how to use my computer.