This sweet radio sounds so much better than I expected. Reading reviews and watching review videos I had some apprehension but my gut said this little one needed to have a home with me... and on my gosh I'm so glad. I tried the radio and I'll have to relearn how to tune in to stations so I switched over to Aux to play music that way... first was Chicken Nuggetz... the song sounds fantastic. So I switched to Deadmau5... holy pickles!!! Even turned up the speaker didn't struggle at all. The sound was perfection. This radio isn't just for talk radio as others have stated... its fantastic for music.. vocals are clear.. the bass is perfect.. the notes in the background that only a good Bose can translate this one can too..

v-model will ignore the initial value, checked or selected attributes found on any form elements. It will always treat the current bound JavaScript state as the source of truth. You should declare the initial value on the JavaScript side, using the data optionreactivity APIs.


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For languages that require an IME (Chinese, Japanese, Korean etc.), you'll notice that v-model doesn't get updated during IME composition. If you want to respond to these updates as well, use your own input event listener and value binding instead of using v-model.

If the initial value of your v-model expression does not match any of the options, the element will render in an "unselected" state. On iOS this will cause the user not being able to select the first item because iOS does not fire a change event in this case. It is therefore recommended to provide a disabled option with an empty value, as demonstrated in the example above.

true-value and false-value are Vue-specific attributes that only work with v-model. Here the toggle property's value will be set to 'yes' when the box is checked, and set to 'no' when unchecked. You can also bind them to dynamic values using v-bind:

The true-value and false-value attributes don't affect the input's value attribute, because browsers don't include unchecked boxes in form submissions. To guarantee that one of two values is submitted in a form (e.g. "yes" or "no"), use radio inputs instead.

HTML's built-in input types won't always meet your needs. Fortunately, Vue components allow you to build reusable inputs with completely customized behavior. These inputs even work with v-model! To learn more, read about Usage with v-model in the Components guide.

The reason behind it is not working is, you are using ng-repeat & you are defining ng-model variable in it. The way ng-repeat works is, it create a new child scope(prototypically inherited) on each iteration of collection. So the ng-model which resides in ng-repeat template, belongs that newly created scope. Here ng-model="selectedOccurrence" create selectedOccurrence scope variable on each iteration of ng-repeat.

Checkboxes are not so good for this scenario; the user could leave them both blank, and you don't get your answer. If you are asking a yes/no or true/false question where you want only one answer, then you should be using radio buttons instead of checkboxes.

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On these pages I have listed numerous photos of USA Philco home sets built from 1928 through 1960. The gallery pages are broken down by calendar year though 1934; model year from 1935 on. Philco did not observe "model years" until June 1934, which marked the introduction of their 1935 model lineup. Normally, Philco introduced a new radio line in June, followed by mid-season model changes seven months later in January. Sometimes, models were changed, added, or removed in months other than June or January; these changes, when major, are noted in the list below.

The listing of Philco radio models in these Gallery pages are comprehensive and, to the best of my knowledge, include every known/documented USA model through the 1957 model year. Pages for 1958, 1959 and 1960 Philcos may not show or list all of the radio models for these three years and may contain errors in the transistor radio listings.

So I decided it was time to test drive a suitable replacement. After searching, I found the RadioShack Model 12-587 AM/FM radio. At a clearance price of $14.99 (US), there will be no loss of sleep if Dad misplaces it or drops it on the pavement.

Radioshak digital portable FM/AM radio dopes not scan on even digital decimals., only on odd decimals . For example does not run on FM 97.4 , only on either 97.1, 97.3, 97.5 , 97.7 and so on. Thus if you wish to listen to broadcasting on odd decimals, it is not possible. Thus for me it is redundant unless Radioshak tell me how to make it scan on even decimals.

Reegards

Louis F. Batshone

[email protected]

Great review. Radio is way overpriced. Based on its performance, you could have gotten one at the dollar store that would have worked as good. Amazon has radios like this that include the shortwave band for under $10.

But please note that we will never create a post and product link explicitly to receive a commission. Additionally, we always try to include links to other retail options if they are available, as we support and freely advertise independent ham radio retailers. Thank you, too, for your support of these sites.

It should be said that modes (both the COMM-ADF-AUX mode selection and the mode selector switch) only take effect by the cockpit in command of the radios (there are buttons at the top of the COMM-NAV control panel that are marked COMM CMD and NAV CMD that are used to take control of either function and will be accompanied by a green light in the cockpit with command).

Hi, allow me to add to this discussion.

I was in the USAF during the early Vietnam years. My specialty was Aircraft Radio Repairman. I spent 2 years working on Phantoms. F4C and F4D models, but mostly on the F4D. I never worked on an F4E.

The F4C was basically an F4B (Navy/ Marines version) with minimal required Air Force modifications such as flight controls in the rear cockpit, low pressure tires and a few other things.

The radio used in the F4B and F4C was the RT 546.

The F4D was the complete Air Force version with all the gadgets they required at the time.

The Radio was changed to an RT793 and, as far as I can find out, remained the radio installed during the rest of the Air Force F4 Phantom production run which is what divinee said. And, as divinee said, the RT793 is related to the ARC 51. 

One time I got called out to check the radio on a plane I had never worked on before and the radio was an ARC 51 which I had never seen before. I took the radio back to the shop, opened it up and to my surprise, there was basically an RT793 hiding inside. Just a few small differences. From the outside they do not look at all alike.

This photo link in Northstar98 above post shows the control box sitting on top of the grey RT793 radio unit. These would have been used in F4D and later air Force Phantoms. 

Navy and Marine Phantoms probably used different radios.

Hi, I am not familiar with the ARC 164V, I think I was out of the Air Force before it came along. Apparently it was developed to replace several different older radios but I can not find anything about it being used to replace the RT793A in the Phantom. I did find an article about Greece replacing the RT793A radios in their F4E's for something else. e24fc04721

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