Stumbling around with the SI4732 Pocket Mini

SI4732 inside (click to expand)

What you see is a circuit board, a battery (lower left) and the speaker lower right.

The story starts with how weak the speaker sounds. I thought some earphones might help but they didn’t; in fact, I could barely hear anything on earphones. Perhaps an obvious flaw in the earphone jack could be found. Opening the radio proved an adventure. One can see a rather substantial screw pillar on the lower right; this is coming from the back of the radio. Three screws came off with some effort, but the 4th screw just spun around with no effort. It turns out that the screw head was broken off (not by me), leaving the rest of a very long screw holding both parts of the case firmly together. The only solution that worked was to use a fine-tipped soldering iron to heat the screw enough to melt the plastic to release it.

Remarkably, the radio still works as you see it in the photo. The phone jack is soldered onto the board and leaves nothing obvious to inspect. I asked a question about fixing the earphone jack on the Si47XX for Radio Experimenters Facebook group, and got this reply:

Bluetooth transmitter and Bluetooth speaker is the simplist

If you look closely at my photo, there is the phrase “WiFi + BT Model” and an antenna is etched onto the board above the chip, leaving the question 0pen whether it’s already capable of Bluetooth or not. I put on V1.01 of the G8PTN software where I specify ESP32-S3, the chipset I have. The photo also indicates that the chip has 16 MB of flash memory (some have less).

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Watching the Weather

This little trek started when I found an old weather sensor in a drawer. These come with weather stations to show what the temperature is remotely (or wind speed, humidity or rainfall).

The specific FCC ID for my sensor is RNERF100MTX, sold by Chaney Instrument Co. under the ACURITE brand. I found a manual and learned that the device transmits in the ISM (Industrial, Scientific and Medical) band that spans 433.05 – 434.79 MHz. Weather sensors typically operate around 433.92 MHz, but the exact frequency can vary depending on the manufacturer and device.

I also learned from my research that such devices use simple off/on encoding. That’s why my original title, “Listening to the Weather,” had to be changed. I have a few devices that can receive the ISM band frequencies, but I selected an RTL-SDR dongle since there wasn’t going to be anything to listen to.

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First Impressions: SI4732 Pocket Mini

The radio arrived today, a day early, from AliExpress. The box didn’t look to good, but the contents were fine.

The photo doesn’t carry the idea of how small this is. The radio is about 3 1/4″ wide and the outside diameter of that donut antenna is less than 4″.

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ATS25 Notes

I have an ATS25 max-Decoder that I’ve used some, and struggled with some. I keep plugging away trying to get some use from it. I’ve picked up some stations, gotten FT4 to work, listened to SSB, and decoded CW training transmissions. I currently have firmware version 4.2 AIR, 23 March 2025. The user manual is much improved with this release.

Wi-Fi

After installing the 3/23/2025 software, Wi-Fi wouldn’t connect to my home network. The entries were indicated that they had been configured (blue) or a connection was being attempted (yellow). I found that I had to go into the Access Point selection, DELETE the existing credentials, and add them back before it would connect. It is possible that I lost some data due to problems I had with the last firmware installation.

Daylight Savings Time (Summer Time)

I wanted to set the clock for daylight savings time. Most of my radios are set to UTC and I didn’t know exactly how to set that either. I found the Si47XX for Radio Experimenters group on Facebook, and one of the commenters there explained the process: Press the RETRO button on the main screen, then SET, then CITY. When you select the city, click CHANGE, then EDIT and OK. Time offset will be flashing in the upper right corner of the screen and can be changed with the encoder knob. Click OK when done, then =>, EXIT, => and finally EXIT.

Antenna switch

Make sure the antenna switch is set correctly. On the max-Decoder, the AUTO setting is the way to go.

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Incoming Radio: Degen DE1131

For the time being, there are pre-tariff Chinese radios for sale in the US at reasonable prices, and I’m scraping the bottom of the barrel for things to review. I came upon on this new-condition Degen DE1131 Touch Screen Controlled Portable AM/FM/SW Digital radio on eBay for $19.99 including shipping from Electronnix. I’ll link to the eBay listing since there are multiples for sale (and they are offered on Amazon for $19.98 from the same seller).

Degen DE1131 Touch Screen Controlled Portable AM/FM/SW Digital radio

This is a radio I looked at some years ago, and rejected because of its original price ($79). It’s a an eleven and a half-year-old radio introduced in November 2013, and I guess they’re finally blowing them out now.

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De maximus

I’m no fortuneteller and I don’t have any special expertise in international trade, but I can report what I saw today.

I ordered a Chinese-made WWVB time signal receiver module from a Canadian seller on eBay. It cost $9.13. Here’s a screen shot from my order on eBay:

WWVB receiver module

When I went back to check the order today, there was a note on the seller’s listing that it had been updated:

That’s about a 1000% increase.

Instead of raising the price, some international eBay sellers are just adding the tariff to the shipping cost (which I prefer because it makes it clear what’s going on and makes it easier to do price comparisons). Here’s an example of a radio I have:

$27.99 radio with $110 shipping.

Or how about $505 to ship a Tecsun S8800 from Hong Kong?

The title of this blog post is a play on a trade policy called “de minimus,” that allows Americans to order things from other countries, up to one package per day valued up to $800, with no import duties. That policy ends for China on May 2. The shipping country isn’t important; it’s the country of origin that determines the tariff.

My WWVB clock module should have shipped 3 days ago by eBay’s standard 2-day shipping policy, but it hasn’t. Supposedly eBay international shipping rolls up all taxes and duties into the selling price. So whether it will ever ship is an open question in my mind.

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Artificial Interaction

I thought I would try out the Grok AI today, so I asked Microsoft Copilot to make up a query to test it out. Copilot knows things I’m interested in and it came up with this challenge:

Analyze the impact of the recent solar storm on global radio communications. Include specific effects on WWVB signal reception, shortwave propagation, and satellite systems.

Copilot explained that its question requires current event awareness, demands technical analysis and tests depth of access.

Grok returned a remarkably detailed response:

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