FM radio for biking?


OK, this is really miscellaneous! I bike to work, and recently bought Radio Shack's "best" portable radio (about the size of a deck of cards), and their best earbuds. The radio was about $60, and the earbuds about $30.

The radio doesn't do very well. It is very prone to static depending on where it is positioned. The sound isn't bad (except for a quite noticeable background hiss)when the reception is good. It would be OK if I found a good spot and didn't move!

The radio has digital tuning and a "mono" switch, but still seems to be poor at "pulling in" stations.

Does anyone have suggestions for a better device for listening to the radio while biking? I'd be willing to spend as much as a couple hundred dollars.

Also, what do people use (if anything) for earphones? These earbuds sound decent, but generate quite a "whistle" in the breeze when I get moving.

Thanks for the bandwidth!

- Eric
ehart
As an advid cicylist and audiophile I would strongly discourage listening to any spoken word or music while riding a bike on a road. You put yourself at great risk of injury. This is really uncool and not good behavior or modeling. Please reconsider your actions!
As someone who used to seriously race bicycles and do long workouts on city streets, I can assure you that if you can't hear the bus, it isn't there. Of course, my racing career was put to an end by MetroTransit #3445. I can't forget it because the number is permanently etched on my butt.
Get a pair of Sony sport headphones(yellow) they allow most ambient sounds in as long as you don't have your source cranked way up. I use them with a Sony Sport walkman radio or a Rio mp3 unit and have no problems hearing traffic. I have tried the "ear bud" types and they do plug your ears and are uncomfortable. I do a lot of running and biking in them and the band will fit under most helmets.
Good luck and happy trails
I am with the cyclists above. Road cycling warrants your full attention. Even when you do everything right, accidents can happen. No need to skew the odds against yourself.