From the sparse (and often fluctuating) signal of 23 stations (under which the public broadcasters again 2 steps lower best signal strength than the private ones) fetches the DAB 14 out what is just possible for the price. If the minimum strength and error rate is sufficient, you can listen to the result quite well. Of course, one must not expect miracles from the built-in speakers, but if you connect to a neat system (I assume here a Bose Sound-Link II Blue Tooth speakers where I hang a BT transmitter into the headphone jack of the DAB 14) is the sound pretty good.
A few points of criticism, there are also: the first 20 presets for stations (FM 10x, 10x DAB) are present. That's not enough for FM, DAB. Then you have to "manually" select the station from the list.
Annoying is also that the display backlight stays on when you press no button while using battery power only a few seconds. Although the LCD display will remain on, but you can read only in the best light. This is annoying when reading info display.
But otherwise the Dual DAB 14 is already ok, a small, lightweight plastic box holding which fulfills its purpose. With design and technology icons of the past, the dual brand no longer has anything to do.