this looks pretty neat, but you never know
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DHHOZBI/?tag=fabo03-20
Lot of bad reviews
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DHHOZBI/?tag=fabo03-20
Lot of bad reviews
I heart radio, and pandora both have issues getting a signal inside a metal building. The OP stated he was working with a metal building. I have pandora and i cannot get a signal from that or get even get internet inside my metal building on my phone, additionally if i am talking on it, i better not go too far into my building, or the call drops. Dealing with a metal building is quite a bit different as it shields signals badly. It was spotty with the fiberglass skylites in the roof, however once i closed them in because of hail in my area of the country, i get absolutely no signal, and a marginal one at best with the door open.FM radio...Huh ? Bunch of blabbing,commercials,and static.
Get into the 21st century. Pandora or I heart radio on your phone.
Get an adapter for your stereo, and plug it in.
Cheers !
I have wifi in my house. As soon as i step outside the building it connects with a strong signal.
Not sure that will work. If its inside the building, the building blocks the signal, if its outside the building, the building blocks the signal. My shop is 15 feet away from my house. As soon as i walk outside i get a super hot wifi signal, and radio signal. The only way a wifi booster would work in an all metal building with the doors closed would be to run a wire to pipe it inside the shop. Something i am not going to do. Now the FM antenna i am willing to do. Add that to my list of 8,000 things to fo.Your problem sounds more like you are out of WiFi range. Had the same issue,with a detached garage.
Try one of these in your garage. WiFi extender. They work good, and are inexpensive.
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read post #27...I wouldnt mention lightning strike if the antenna was inside.Read the OP’s post carefully and you will see that he gets FM radio reception fine when the garage doors are open, but not when they are closed.
This means that he lives in an area where FM radio reception is accessible, but with the garage doors closed the enclosed metal structure is preventing the reception.
This means his metal building with the doors closed is acting as a “Faraday Cage” which blocks radio transmissions.
Therefore, the only possible answer is to attach the receiver to an external antenna using properly shielded cable so the the available FM signals outside the “Faraday Cage” can reach the receiver.
Problem solved.
Read the OP’s post carefully and you will see that he gets FM radio reception fine when the garage doors are open, but not when they are closed.
This means that he lives in an area where FM radio reception is accessible, but with the garage doors closed the enclosed metal structure is preventing the reception.
This means his metal building with the doors closed is acting as a “Faraday Cage” which blocks radio transmissions.
Therefore, the only possible answer is to attach the receiver to an external antenna using properly shielded cable so the the available FM signals outside the “Faraday Cage” can reach the receiver.
Problem solved.
You have a window? Here is what can be done. Get a WAP (Wireless access point) Its like an extender but it has an RJ54 (ethernet) jack on it so old computers can get on line. Put the WAP up by your window so it can 'see' your house and get your strong house wifi, then run a ethernet cable to a generic wireless router inside your metal workshop and have a new wireless point of presence inside your Faraday cage. The extender may work just fine on its own but you must get it in line of sight with the house. That will get you inside wifi, but an antenna on the roof should get you plenty of FM. PM me, I got something for you.Not sure that will work. If its inside the building, the building blocks the signal, if its outside the building, the building blocks the signal. My shop is 15 feet away from my house. As soon as i walk outside i get a super hot wifi signal, and radio signal. The only way a wifi booster would work in an all metal building with the doors closed would be to run a wire to pipe it inside the shop. Something i am not going to do. Now the FM antenna i am willing to do. Add that to my list of 8,000 things to fo.
Got a spare AT-271 10 foot folding PRC-25 antenna in your bag?...
I spent 2 decades as a Special Forces communications sergeant and have made all sorts of antennas in all sorts of places....you made need to erect a large exterior antenna high in order to get the signal.
Got a spare AT-271 10 foot folding PRC-25 antenna in your bag?We had to use those in a clearing to get any comm in the double canopy jungles of Philippines. Not sure the thing is optimized for 88-107Mhz FM though.

I have the same problem as the OP, so I am paying attention here, too. My building is all metal. Cuts off cordless phone signal and has very poor am fm reception. ........and I am NOT going with internet radio. I know. I am stuck in the past, but let me be happy there. LOL Reception is great everywhere outside the shop. In the car, my truck, the house. So it's not location. I am totally electronically stupid......as of yet, I have not seen a clear solution. Del's post, while informative, got over my head in two sentences. LOL Can yall stupid this up a little?
You have a window? Here is what can be done. Get a WAP (Wireless access point) Its like an extender but it has an RJ54 (ethernet) jack on it so old computers can get on line. Put the WAP up by your window so it can 'see' your house and get your strong house wifi, then run a ethernet cable to a generic wireless router inside your metal workshop and have a new wireless point of presence inside your Faraday cage. The extender may work just fine on its own but you must get it in line of sight with the house. That will get you inside wifi, but an antenna on the roof should get you plenty of FM. PM me, I got something for you.
Not too mention that in just about every post apocalyptic move you see, there is a good guy with a shortwave radio sending all sorts of pertinent to survival information into the etherThere is something aesthetically pleasing and personally rewarding about putting a well-designed piece of metal into the air and receiving communication from your fellow man. Long live broadcast signals.
WIFI device to stereo? Get an old laptop, PC or even a cell phone that has no plan on it (like an old android) and use the 1/8 headphone jack to L/R RCA adapter and run them into your L/R AUX connection. Use the phones wifi and get Pandora or whatever you like and rock on. Old laptops are $10 on www.Shopgoodwill.com and dont need any horsepower to run pandora, although I find the "stations" that you create on Pandora are pretty limited but I got some weird taste in music.Steve, how do I connect this thing to my receiver? It would do me no good anyway if I have to xmit through my phone. Those 2 big Bose boxes need to make enough noise to be heard over a grinder!