Your FM receiver section is probably in need of "alignment". I take it you cannot eliminate the interfering station by careful adjustment of the tuning knob? Do you live within 50 miles or so of the stations? If so, it should work quite well. There are quite a few radio repair outfits around that specialize in older car radios, including FM - I think you need to send it off for a complete "tune-up". This requires experience and some really sophisticated instrumentation to perform, it is not for the neophyte to fiddle with (which may be what happened to your radio, as they are normally quite stable.) Dick Benjamin (who used to do this sort of thing as a favor for folks, but retired years ago. permanently) ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark McDonald" <tomswift@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Friday, May 02, 2003 9:06 AM Subject: IML: poor reception > Well, folks, I found another antenna for my '68 and put it in today. > Bzzzz-- it goes right up and comes right back down. So I'm happy about > that; now at least I have a complete working antenna. > > However, my FM reception has not improved much. AM is much better-- > used to not be able to get any AM at all (the difference b/n freq. > modulation vs. amplitude modulation, I guess). But on the FM side, I > still get a lot of what I would call crosstalk or bleedover. You hear > one station-- but you also hear several other stations in the > background. No matter where I am on the dial I'm getting several > stations at once. > > Anybody know how to cure this? > > Thanks, Mark > > >