I have one for two reasons. First, I don’t keep my phone in the bedroom. Second, using the radio as an alarm means I can adjust the volume so it’s quiet enough to not wake my wife, who doesn’t need to get up at the godawful hour I do.
It’s also nice to be able to see the time from across the room in the early morning darkness, so I know if I need to speed things up to get out on time.
We have one that is so old, I can’t remember where it came from. It was in our attic for the longest time, but I recently got it out and play the radio when we leave our dog alone for a couple of hours.
I have two; one for getting up and another to remind me to go to work. (I’m afternoon/night shift)
My wife has one to get up.
We have an additional one in our one “hobby” room but more for the radio than the clock which has flashed 12 for the last three years.
If you want to count it there is a clock in my boombox behind me (currently playing Savatage’s Dead Winter Dead).
I have a clock radio, and use it. (Actually two of them, one by my side of the bed in the master bedroom, and another by the guest bed, just in case.) They do the job.
I suppose I could use my phone as my alarm (even my antique flip phone is capable of that) but I’d have to remember to have it on the bedside table. The clock radio is already there; I don’t have to remember to put it there.
Yes, but they were purchased long before phones were a solution. I personally just use my tablet which I take to bed with me.
They are, however, my only working radios, and I do occasionally use them for that, as it’s more convenient to listen to the radio for winter closings while getting dressed than to try and find it online.
Now I’m thinking, should I try to sell mine now - that’s exactly the clock radio I’ve got two of - or should I hang onto them and see if I can get $1000 for them a few years down the road?
I still prefer a clock radio to my smartphone, hands down. My phone has work apps on it and so must be unlocked before anything else can happen - way too much trouble for a non-morning person. The phone likely wouldn’t survive long…
Yes, in the bedroom plugged in. We used it regularly as an alarm until about a year ago when we switched to using Google assistant. It has red LED lights, probably 30 years old. Never used the radio as the sound is awful. It is just there to show the time.
Of course every time there is any kind of power outage or time change, I have to reset the pain in the ass with the little archaic buttons. And if I wanted to use the alarm, I had to figure out for both the clock and the alarm setting, which dot is am or pm.
Probably the second clock radio I have owned in my life, the first was the kind with flipping real numbers. It was always a marvel to me that it worked at all.
Technically it is one - a multi-bandwidth receiver (short, medium and long wave in addition to AM and FM) that has a clock and an alarm function. Pretty sure it’s in a box in my storage room at the moment. I’d drag it out, but frankly I can get more world stations through a few good websites than I probably could with the old Radio Shack refugee.
I have a clock in just about every room of the house, since I don’t normally wear a wristwatch and I don’t carry my cell phone when I’m just bopping around at home. The ones in the master bedroom and one guest room are clock radios.
However, I place a piece of cardboard in front of the one in the master bedroom while I sleep. I’m very sensitive to light sources at night. (I have taped over all the other light sources already, like the LEDs on the cable box and TV.)
I feel her pain. Once I had a GE digital clock (not the ‘classic’ above) and it had no bounce circuit on any of the setting buttons, so it was next to impossible to set easily.
Much later I had an ‘atomic’ clock from Oregon Scientific that synchronized to WWV. The buttons worked fine but it insisted that I go on DST in the spring, even though we don’t do that shit here in Arizona. I’d change it back to MST and a couple hours later it would have reset to MDT… for weeks after the change over.
My uncle gave me this Panasonic RC-150 clock-radio (link goes to YouTube video) as a hand-me-down when I turned 13. That was over 30 years ago. It still sits on my nightstand today.
I don’t use the alarm or radio functions anymore, though both features still work. It’s just a nightstand clock for me. I’ve thought many times over the years about replacing it with something newer/fancier, but it just hasn’t ever been important enough.
My wife has a fairly new clock-radio on her stand that is also a sound machine for when we sleep. On the very rare occasion we need an alarm, we just use Alexa for that.
(Quoting myself): Since others are linking to photos, here’s mine from the 1977 Radio Shack Catalog. It’s the “Modern-Look LED digital”, original cost $49.95 (about $207 in 2018 dollars). Radio Shack 1977 clock radios