Here's the simplest solution of all. Find a local radio morning show that has a podcast and use that. Morning show "podcasts" are just airchecks of the show.
Oh look, here's one now!
https://www.iheart.com/podcast/139-the-mike-taylor-show-27131328/
^My top pet peeves when listening to college/community radio.
Alright, sounds good. Im not too familiar with the licensing process to be honest, perhaps someone here can share some insight...
For equipment, it depends if you want to do live notifications or pre-recorded. When I started part15 broadcasting, my feed was a 6 hour looped VHS tape with and announcements music on it! Now days a computer will suffice. I use the outdated but still useful WinAmp on a windows XP machine that is no longer connected to the internet. it has ~100GB of music on shuffle 24/7. WinAmp has limiter and compressor plugins, useful on the AM broadcast band. Removing the need for these to be implemented in hardware, saving money. Also audacity is useful for converting Stereo to Mono and normalizing audio. I think VLC and iTunes also have compressors now, so you can use those. Rivendell's automation software isn't bad either, and its free. the audio will be taken from the sound card via a 3.5mm audio cable and run through an 3.5mm to RCA converter. This RCA output is passed into a transmitter. Mine is home made, using DDS technology and a micro controller making it quite frequency agile. Changing the filters, i can move the output to the Shortwave or Long wave bands if needed. the RF output is passed to a ferrous-loaded copper pipe, complete with a few ground radials. Your antenna will be slightly different, but the audio side could be identical.
this looks to be a good schematic for a basic carrier current transmitter
there is an /r/part15 as well, but it appears mostly inactive
Many phone makers, including Samsung, LG, HTC and Motorola, have enabled FM radios in the chipsets.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.nextradioapp.nextradio&hl=en_US
The one big name missing from the list is Apple.
u/Auston314 The sony ICFC1PJ Looks like what you are looking for, it has the features you seem to want plus some and looks really nice. It also uses an external AM loop antenna, which will help in your dxing distant AM stations at night.
KTRS 550 AM and KMOX 1120 are what you seem to be looking for from St. Louis AM radio.
http://www.rivendellaudio.org/
Crazy powerful, extensible, open source.
If you roll your own, I would highly recommend having somebody Linux-savvy around.
Otherwise, you can buy premade systems and support from https://www.paravelsystems.com/
If Youtube videos don't work for you, I'd try signing up for 30 day free trials of SiriusXM's online streaming with throwaway email accounts here. The app is easy to use and there's a ton of on-demand audio content. Besides Stern, there's a ton of other open-talk channels and shows, like Faction Talk and Barstool Sports for the male audience, and Stars and EW more for the female audience.
You should get a link to an .m3u address, sort of like listening to a streaming radio station, and then use your audio player of choice (I use iTunes) to open the stream.
It should all be in the manual.
EDIT: butt won't work for your application unless you subscribe to a Shoutcast or Icecast account. Audio Hijack WILL work as its own audio server, so that's probably more suited towards what you want to do.
First of all, in a production environment you shouldn't be getting rid of anything that you haven't already replaced.
That said, you can lease a SIP trunk and connect to it with a softphone and/or VoIP desk phone. This is a very affordable SIP trunk option https://sip-trunk.digiumcloud.com/plan/minute
Here's a free softphone http://www.linphone.org/
Just for listening? Or are you wanting to get your ham ticket and transmit. I highly recommend this tecsun pl-330 with SSB
Hey, welcome to the great hobby of radio. Before you know it you may have a shortwave radio beside your bed with a 50ft wire running into the tree outside your window. For this fate i suggest the tecsun pl-330 https://www.amazon.com/Tecsun-Digital-Worldband-Single-Receiver/dp/B0921HN6QM/ref=mp_s_a_1_3?dchild=1&keywords=tecsun+pl-330&qid=1619950975&sr=8-3.
That is a bit pricy for a handheld but comes with a feature called Single Side Band (SSB) which is used to tune in amateur radio operators all across the world. If you ever have questions feel free to ask
A decade ago, this would've been a job for a $3500 spectrum analyzer. Today, you can do it with a $35 RTL-SDR receiver. The 315 and 433 MHz bands are nicely within its range, and its lack of sensitivity can be a virtue for hunting strong interference like this.
The basic $35 kit is gonna work just fine for what you're doing, you don't need any of the filters or adapters in the more expensive offerings. (Realistically the even-more-basic $22 kit would work fine too, but in the event that you decide this is an interesting hobby to explore further, it's a much worse foundation to start from. Up to you.)
Hie thee over to /r/rtlsdr and hit up the wiki for software. Whatever OS you're running, you want something with a spectrum analyzer or "waterfall graph".
Set it to something like 313-317MHz so you can see a little on either side of the signal of interest. Turn on automatic gain control, then turn it back off (it'll get you in the ballpark). Adjust the sensitivity (gain controls) until the signal on the graph is neither at the top nor the bottom of the displayable strength range.
Then, hold the antenna against (or just in front of) your chest, and slowly turn in a circle, using your body to block the signal as you watch the display. Where it's weakest, the signal is behind you. Lather, rinse, repeat!
There's a good chance that the interference is coming from an appliance or computer or whatever, so another thing you can try, while waiting for that to ship, is ask each neighbor to turn off their main circuit breaker for a minute. Yeah yeah, they'll need to reset the clock on the microwave, but cycling all the breakers is healthy to keep 'em from sticking anyway. If things suddenly work when one particular house is off, unplug individual devices until you narrow it down.
Check out Racketeer Radio.. I think it’s right up your alley! You can download the app! Apple App Store: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/racketeer-radio-official/id1494151743?ls=1
Google play: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.icreo.racketeerradio
Or the multiple other avenues to listen: www.RacketeerRadio.com
User name checks out. I do like quite a few Prunus radios, they are almost always near great. But sometimes I'd describe them as "frustratingly close to amazing".
The Prunus J-189 wins hands down on cost. Two things kept me from recommending it:
Too small, it needs a bigger case to take advantage of its speakers properly. Stereo works best when there is deep resonance in the enclosure and space between the right and left speakers to differentiate the right and left channel.
Wrong kind of battery. It's a perfectly fine one but he wanted standard batteries.
I used to always hate FM transmitters because I'd very often encounter interference and/or pickup other traffic's signals. But this was back in the day when FM transmitters were more common. I've been using cassettes in my 2000 Camry ntil about 3 years ago because I couldn't find them anymore at the local CVS.
​
Got myself this thing and I've been satisfied with it. https://smile.amazon.com/gp/product/B01K7OHDKS/ref=ppx\_yo\_dt\_b\_search\_asin\_title?ie=UTF8&psc=1
Literally on the link you sent - using an affiliate code I might add..... has a refurb for $22
https://smile.amazon.com/dp/B07KX8KWCK/ref=dp_cr_wdg_tit_rfb
If I don’t have a radio in your phone default. Then there is no way for u to have radio. But I can recommend some a radio https://www.amazon.com/Sangean-HDR-14-HD-Pocket-Radio/dp/B07BF3727Y/ref=sr_1_4?crid=1FIS2PFVBJPJD&keywords=portable+hd+radio&qid=1659527066&sprefix=portable+hd+rad%2Caps%2C166&sr=8-4. This radio has hd radio, this gives it no static no distortion and high crisp clear treble and deeper base. I also will give u immersive text data and on some radios even cover art images. The stereo separation on hd radio is nice. Great technology great radio
so I finally installed the new antenna and tested it....
I got this one which is the most quality looking one I could find.
https://www.amazon.ca/gp/product/B001JT3292/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b_asin_title_o05_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
it is mounted on the roof rack on a swivel mount
It seems to be better than the old antenna but its hard to tell. I did get good reception in the city which was not always the case with the old one....
all in all its better because also its out of the way off road and on road it gets unobstructed view
Maybe the Retekess TR618 would be okay for your application. It gets plenty loud. However, it does not have stereo speakers, if that matters to you. In addition to AM and FM it can receive stronger shortwave stations, and you can listen to MP3 files on a USB memory stick or microSD card.
If you want to operate an FM station that’ll reach more than a few dozen feet, you can be a pirate broadcaster. This transmitter is a really basic plug and play transmitter. It’s not a high quality transmitter but it can reach a couple miles with good antenna placement: https://www.amazon.com/Transmitter-Long-Range-Exciter-88Mhz/dp/B09D7SKSCB/ref=mp_s_a_1_5. As noted elsewhere on this thread, operating this without an FCC license is against the law. I have no comment on the likelihood of enforcement, but it is a risk.
Pretty much any audio source can feed this transmitter via 1/8” stereo cable. You’ll also need a basic mixer (e.g. Alesis MultiMix), a $100 mic, mic stand, various cables, and any other inputs you want. With your existing laptop, you could hypothetically build a really basic, small pirate station for <$500.
If the static is interference created by something in your environment, another radio will pick it up too. Before you spend money on a good radio please try really hard to borrow a portable radio from somebody and use it to see if there are any clean reception spots in your room.
I am happy with my Sangean radios, they longer produce the models I own but the one below looks it would be a decent choice:
https://www.amazon.com/Sangean-PR-D18BK-Portable-Digital-Protective/dp/B00FK0AEG0/
Read up on Sangean and C. Crane radios, lots of great models.
Freebanders operate in the 25 MHz to 30 MHz frequency range. They use amplitude modulation or single sideband transmission modes. Something like this would work:
https://www.amazon.com/Tecsun-Digital-PL330-Worldband-Receiver/dp/B0921HN6QM/
It's not cheap and there is a learning curve. Is it worth it to hear yokels and idiots holler at each other? Granted you would also gain the ability to hear a lot of other radio stuff that you've never heard before.
https://ifttt.com might do it. It's an app, stands for "if this, then that" and it allows you to automate certain tasks, so you could set up an automation that opens the TuneIn app at 9am and (and this is the part I'm not sure if it would work) plays a certain station. Then at 10am, another automation closes the app, opens it again and selects the new station. I believe it's for phone app only but not sure (fwiw, I've never used it, just know of it).
You can get a banana plug or speaker plug, screw some wire in it and plug it in the radio
I use these all the time:
Fisual Easy Fix Banana Plugs 24K Gold Plated (8 Pack) https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B013P36KRU/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_Y8YRQSW9H4AXXFEJXGTN
A quality stereo tuner from hifi setup might help, but you'll have to have a proper stereo set-up with receiver and speakers as well (worth it in my opinion, can't beat the sound from a proper stereo).
You will be able to mount an external antenna which should help your reception. You could also use a directional antenna, mounted outdoors or in your attic, such as this: https://www.amazon.com/FM-Loop-Antenna-Outdoor-Attic-mount/dp/B006SLV25C/ref=psdc\_3236443011\_t3\_B00NRHAV2K
You must live near a strong AM tower.
You'll want to use good shielded cables and preferably balanced cabling when you can. You can also pick up ferrite chokes like these
Personally my favorite little "survival" radio is of the "go cheap and get two" mindset (see also, /r/preppers ): https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B07VQRD5HQ/
It eats an 18650, charges from microUSB (sad it's not type-C, but whatever), boasts very listenable audio quality, includes a surprisingly competent little flashlight, and yes it tunes shortwave just fine.
The trick is the antenna. The little telescoping whip is only appropriate for FM (VHF) frequencies. The internal ferrite rod does a fine job on AM (MW), since those are usually super close and strong. But for shortwave, you have to DIY. Get a longass piece of wire, heck an unplugged extension cord works great, and use an alligator clip-lead to attach it to the FM whip. Then you need a counterpoise -- an antenna is always a dipole after all -- and the easiest way to do that is using the USB connector. Plug in a USB cable, then take another alligator clip and attach it to the shell of the other end, and run that as far as you can in the other direction. If you can do 15 feet antenna and 15 feet counterpoise, you'll have a good shot at shortwave. (And try to get the antenna wire up high if you can. A clothesline is good, throwing the end into a tree is better.)
See also, /r/shortwave/
Be warned, shortwave DX listening is a deep rabbithole of a hobby, and has a lot of crossover with /r/amateurradio as well. You may well find yourself turning into a ham before you know it...
IDK how good of a radio it is but the first device that comes to mind is this neat lil thing:
If you want something from an established brand you could look into something like the Sony ICF-P26, which I'm seeing at Walmart for $19.88. I seem to recall buying one of these at a drugstore sometime back and being fine with it.
I recently wanted a cheap portable with weather radio and ended up buying this one from Vondior. At $27.99 it's a little above your price. I know nothing about the Vondior corporation, its affiliates or its subsidiaries, but this is a decent device and the sensitivity is good. I live in the boonies and that's important here.
easiest way it to buy a portable am radio. as others have mentioned there is also the semi-complicated rtlsdr method. I'll need an rtlsdr usb dongle, an otg/with power splitter cable, and a tuner app on ur phone. it will receive am/fm/ham radio and watch adsb traffic. https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=marto.androsdr2
Sure this focuses on Tunein but the BBCWS still airs on SXM ch. 120 both over satellite and streaming. Also, there are public stations that air the BBCWS 24/7 on one of their HD channels and then they normally stream those channels. Like WRVO in Update New York. In a way, this is a win for public stations. https://tunein.com/radio/WRVO3-899-s144940/
according to this answer on Quora* (https://www.quora.com/On-average-what-percentage-of-air-time-on-the-radio-is-advertising-vs-actual-content-music-DJ-etc-What-about-television) it’s 12-16, but either way, that’s almost 1/4 of every hour lost to meaningless marketing messages... that’s acceptable to you?
AM was never incorporated into cell phones because of the antenna requirements.
You can still get small portable radios on Amazon
Olá :)
Again, parroting off of what other people here are saying, a podcast would be easier for a talk show!
You can upload episodes to SoundCloud, and maybe use something like https://anchor.fm/ to distribute to Apple Music, Spotify, etc.
You might be able to use a strong WiFI 6 router indoors (as a base station, placed next to a window in the general direction your car would be) with a range extender mounted somewhere outside (say, at some point along a long driveway) to help reach your 100 m requirement. Additional range extenders can be used to cover larger areas/distances.
Mixlr seems to be perfect for what you’re describing http://mixlr.com. Otherwise, just record and upload to http://mixcloud.com which allows shows with copyrighted music -it’s licensing is a bit different from other services.
http://www.rivendellaudio.org/
Rivendell is a complete radio broadcast automation solution, with facilities for the acquisition, management, scheduling and playout of audio content. It has all of the features one would expect in a modern, fully-fledged radio automation system, including support for both PCM and MPEG audio encoding, full voicetracking and log customization as well as support for a wide variety of third party software and hardware. As a robust, functionally complete digital audio system for broadcast radio applications, Rivendell uses industry standard components like the GNU/Linux Operating System, the AudioScience HPI Driver Architecture and the MySQL Database Engine. Rivendell is available under the GNU Public License.
If any of you programmers know programmers the project can always use some help and contribution. I spoke to the project lead at NAB and he said he'd like to update to a new user interface and get support for more AOIP boards. Remember to donate to the project and spread the word about it too. Also check over the support documents and submit changes if you can't contribute in any other ways.
There are a few programs that do this for online streams.
Also RadioSure does this, but I think I had a use a simple Windows script to schedule the recording times.
I think TuneMyMusic can export your playlists as CSV, you can tinker with them, and then import back into the services in question.
I just used it the other day for that export function, haven't played with the import but the button's there, at least. Don't know how it works.
A phone speaker won't work with a crystal radio. It will need electric amplification.
You need to use a high-impedance earphone like https://www.amazon.com/Crystal-Radio-Earphone-Impedance-3-5mm/dp/B0052EE0AU to have any chance of hearing anything. Even then, it will be quite quiet. Make sure you're in a quiet environment.
Also, what are you using for an antenna? AM frequencies are long in wavelength and antenna size matters.
The antenna is built-in, although you can improve the radio performance by using an external tunable passive loop antenna. You can make one yourself or buy it:
Any radio can be a manpack radio. I have a HF only "manpack" and a "all band, all mode" manpack. You can use most any CB or ham radio, a 6Ah battery and a suitable whip antenna.
There are a lot of variations on this one, and it has a decent sized battery. Unfortunately, not quite under $150:
Look around on eBay and you'll find "manpack" frames, backpacks and radios.
You could try a 75 ohm transformer like this instead
That little radio will do everything except make your dinner
I will tell you a secret, there is no such thing as a HD television antenna this would work.
I wouldn't try transmitting with a regular 12V wall wart.
The best 2 options would be to get a bench power supply or a car battery to hook it up to. Sometimes you can get lucky and find a 12V bench supply at pawn shops.
Amazon has some too, just be sure to run it between 12 and 14 volts. https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07X2VZSL9
I just quickly googled the manual. It has audio inputs on the back so you can buy a bluetooth adapter and plug it in that way.
I like my AM loop but it falls easily if not on a hard surface. It feels a bit cheap. The improvement is quite noticeable though. I eventually want to get this one https://www.amazon.com/Terk-Indoor-AM-Antenna-Advantage/dp/B000069EUW/ref=mp_s_a_1_14?dchild=1&keywords=am+loop+antenna&qid=1603842567&sr=8-14
Flat water is a great conductor of radio waves. Drive down to the water, late at night, and tune your AM radio to a station there. It will probably be coming in loud and clear.
105mi is a bit of a trip for during the day and especially on FM, but if you have a receiving antenna like a dipole you might be able to tune in. (Not affiliated with that Amazon seller, it was just the first link that came up for dipole. Super easy to make one of your own.)
Lastly, radio stations in Cuba are available on livestream. Unless the US government blocks it, of course.
This is not really by frequency, but if the frequency is in the name of the radio station, then you can easily find it. I use this one: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.themobilecoder.ezradio
Sub carrier radios used to be used in such a fashion such as for kids programs or specialized content like reports for medical professionals but that technology almost is non existent now. Naki Radio Home - HiFi WiFi Kosher Internet Radio https://www.amazon.com/dp/B081R62L46/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_fab_tkFCFbYN1V0F1 this internet radio however also comes to mind as it caters exclusively to a Jewish audience
Depending of your phone you could use this adapter between the phone analog phone and the console.
That is probably the cheapest solution. You get audio from the headset on the phone. Some phones have a dedicated headset output.
I would suggest Prunus: https://www.amazon.com/PRUNUS-Transistor-Excellent-Reception-Batteries/dp/B085VY1QZR/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=Prunus+J-05&qid=1600422121&sr=8-1
It less than $30, portable,strong reception, support NOAA's national weather service.
Tecsun makes a clip-on antenna that might improve FM reception, or might just pick up more static from equipment in your workplace. It's a cheap thing to try.
https://www.amazon.com/Tecsun-External-Antenna-Improve-Performance/dp/B0104N76RM
If the PL-310ET has a jack for an external antenna Tecsun probably makes an antenna designed to go with it. Does the manual say anything about that?
Sangean WR-22, has RDS data on the fm band and decent AM sensitivity. https://www.amazon.com/Sangean-WR-22BK-Bluetooth-Table-Top-Receiver/dp/B009OCBBGW
If you want one that's not pork on AM, that's what I recommend.
>When I was a kid in the 70s my dad had a portable radio that did TV audio,
Yup. I recall doing homework in my room and listening to Magnum PI on https://www.amazon.ca/Crane-CCRadio-Multiband-Portable-Weather/dp/B00007079A
(I had this radio in the flesh until about 5 years ago when I disposed of it)
So I have bought a
Signstek ST-05B FM Transmitter for Church, Dual Mode Long Range Stereo Broadcast with Antenna, Silver https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0863J1Y3H/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_t9tgFbPKS79R0
I am trying to boost its antenna and i have had some issues understanding what to do.
I also got this antenna.
Authentic Genuine Nagoya UT-72 Super Loading Coil 19-Inch Magnetic Mount VHF/UHF (144/430Mhz) Antenna PL-259 https://www.amazon.com/dp/B016SIJX28/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_i_RougFb6CH185Y
Will an antenna like this work for sending my fm signal or did i mess up? This has been the toughest part for me to understand.
Reading the reviews for it on Amazon it might not work as well as you’d think. Certain adhesives work better for different things, and glass is tricky. I personally prefer trunk lip mounts.
Idk what you mean by “one off payment” but here’s what I use:
Simple Radio, made by Streema (blue icon with white rectangle radio). The ad-free version is a one-time payment of $2.99 on iOS or Google Play.
Make sure to check that the station you want to listen to is listed. If it isn’t, try contacting the station and let them know that you want them on Streema as listings are free and broadcaster-powered!
Your much better off getting one of these: https://www.amazon.com/Anker-Soundsync-Bluetooth-Connection-Headphones/dp/B07H5C2BQX/ref=mp_s_a_1_16?keywords=bluetooth+adapter&qid=1558843333&s=gateway&sprefix=bluetooth+ada&sr=8-16 and plugging it into your aux input Jack.
I wonder if the TRRS adapter I bought is just faulty because this one is not working.
I'll probably play with the OBS software mentioned by other people.
I've had my eye on this Sony radio for a little while. The reception is supposed to be really good.
Most all of the C Crane brand radios are also great quality.
The key to this is in the length. There are two wires running through that cable. It all depends on whether the wires are connected at the end. Especially for DX (long distance) listening, or pulling just out of range signals in more clearly, just putting wire up does not necessarily help. The goal is to split the wavelength, or frequency of the station, to improve the signal.
You could technically get one of these matching transformers and connect it to 200 feet of speaker wire and get similar results.
I've always preferred the"T" configuration, where the wires split off at 90 degree angles. Not sure why, and there's no scientific reason, just a personal preference.
Thank you for the detailed answer. I'm fine with buying used.
So if I were to get a Tivoli radio with a coaxial antenna connector but I don't have a satellite on my roof, would one of these tv antennas that you can stick on a wall improve reception at all?
Also, is there some kind of rating on the radios that shows their reception strength? Thank you.
Maybe there is a local am or fm station there that carries BBC? If it is shortwave, he would need a really good receiver and antenna to pick up BBC World Service aimed elsewhere. Either way, this Kaito crank radio is well reviewed on Amazon. I am in the US but I assume this radio would be on Amazon.ca also.
Kaito KA500 5-way Powered Emergency AM/FM/SW NOAA Weather Alert Radio with Solar,Dynamo Crank,Flashlight and Reading Lamp, Color Black https://www.amazon.com/dp/B001F0MNRM/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_cwFuyb94NS5WV
Wired? We use a mic/headphone dongle... it works on our iPhones and a wide variety of the droid phones our on-air guys own.
The one below is not the exact ones we have, but is very similar. Ours have a longer lead on them... maybe 2.5' or so.
We have a Comrex Bric in the equipment room we can switch between 4 studios. We then use Luci Lite on the smartphones.... sounds like you are right in the studio. We often run the phone to a mixer so we can hook up an ambient noise mic for remotes so it sounds more like we are on location.
Heres what I use:
Mics - MXL 990 HE x3
Mixer - Behringer X1204USB Premium. If you only have one mic, then this might be overkill.
Mic Boom Stands - Suspension Boom Scissor Arm (Amazon)
Software - SAM Broadcaster (Also dabbled with Jazler). With SAM it has everything you need production and encoding wise. Jazler has no encoders so you'll need to use a separate software to encode to a Shoutcast or Icecast server.
Shoutcast/Icecast: I purchased my own dedicated server to run (in my case) Shoutcast exclusively. I have room if you need (PM Me).
You can make one for under 100 bucks, look up some of the Ramsey Kits. I built my first little AM Tx from a ramsey kit. I find them super fun to do, ha. http://www.amazon.com/Ramsey-Electronics-Shortwave-Radio-Receiver/dp/B0002NRL9I
If only there were a worthy tabletop or boombox Stereo AM-FM-HD radio including the so called "Artist Experience" display with quality audio like the Tivoli radios. a) What experience have folks with audio quality of the Sparc manufactured for Ibiquity?... at http://www.amazon.com/SPARC-Radio-SHD-T750-Table-Alarm/dp/B00TE3L2HE/
b) For tabletop radio audio quality like the Tivoli radios, would connecting a shirt pocket ordinarily used with earbuds AM-FM-HD radio to a Stereo Tivoli radio work well?... for getting similar excellent quality audio that the Tivoli usually produces by listening to HD-2, HD-3 connected through the Tivoli.
Phone makers are also not open about their radio support. Spirit2 FM Tuner in Android play store has done a great job trying to provide a Radio Tuner for unlocked phones, but this has been a frustrating endeavour for him.
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=fm.a2d.s2&hl=en