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PURE Digital Oasis review

Our rating

4.0 stars out of 5

User rating

4 stars out of 5

See all 4 user reviews

What do you think?

Verdict

Radios have a habit of ending up in the kitchen cupboard, dappled with paint and dented in a long-forgotten nail gun accident. If you're looking for something that will stand the test of time, the Oasis may well be it. If you can put up with the weight, this is definitely a radio to consider for those in more hazardous occupations

Good

  • 15-hour battery life
  • Durability
  • Communist styling
  • Great sound

Bad

  • Hefty weight

In this review

While some products struggle to hammer out a niche for themselves, the PURE Oasis is all brawn. There's no mistaking this for what it is: a romper-stomping, reinforced-metal, panic room of a digital radio. Nothing short of nuclear war could pound its way through this chassis. Builders or anyone who works outdoors in extreme weather conditions should enjoy it -- the radio is tested to IP64 standards for water and dust resistance.

Although it's by far the most durable DAB we've tested, you'd expect sound quality on a mono-speakered radio to be unimpressive. In fact, we were pleasantly surprised by the audio quality on the £119 Oasis. It can't hope to match a well-specced stereo DAB, but if you're looking for a smart compromise in hazardous working environments, there's little to top this for ruggedness and fidelity. It might be a hefty investment, but we feel its durability will make it good value.

Design
There's a certain elegance to the Oasis despite its boxy looks. The emphasis here is on quality more than style, but the radio is far from ugly. It's overwhelmingly large for a basic DAB radio, and exceptionally heavy, but the clinical white and silver finish gives it an appealing, military look -- you can imagine these being stock issue to army troops. The extremely durable chassis is constructed, in part, from cast aluminium with a shot-blasted finish. This aluminium frame runs around the edges and corners of the radio, protecting it at the most vulnerable points of impact. The rest of the Oasis is finished in a heavy-duty plastic that feels like the stuff they make riot shields out of.

Given the extra weight the aluminium frame and hard-wearing plastic add to the Oasis, you might be forgiven for thinking PURE has gone too far in bolstering the radio's structure against damage. Some may find that buying a cheaper, lighter and more expendable DAB radio and replacing it when it breaks is a more practical option. However, if you work in a single hazardous location for extended periods, the issue of weight becomes less important. One thing's for sure with the Oasis: it's likely to outlive you -- a rare quality to find in today's consumer electronics. This radio has been built the way your grandfather claims things once were.

Controls on the Oasis are clearly labelled and simple to operate. The conventional rotary tuning and volume controls will be familiar to any radio user. All the controls on the radio are encapsulated in a grippy rubber coating, which presumably lessens the risk of moisture seeping into the openings they make in the chassis. The Oasis is relatively impervious to wet or paint-covered fingers as well as fairly severe weather conditions. We'd draw the line at submerging this DAB -- it's not completely waterproof -- but a torrential downpour, dropped brick, or toppled paint can won't even make it raise an eyebrow. Our one criticism of the design is the LCD which, though acceptable, is too small to view from any real distance -- on top of a stepladder, for example.

The front of the radio also includes a set of four station preset buttons, a power button and a large speaker grill. The speaker is defended against sharp objects by a perforated grill drilled straight into the radio's thick outer shell -- nothing is going to get through this. On the side of the radio there's sockets, covered by bendy rubber plugs, for headphones, aux in, USB and a 9V DC power supply.

Interestingly, the aerial on the Oasis is of the detachable screw-in type. It's rubber and has an extreme tolerance to bending. We folded it back on itself to 180 degrees and it returned to a vaguely vertical position almost immediately. The aerial can be stowed in an indentation on the back of the radio during transport. If you're a radio ham, you could feasibly rig a much bigger aerial into the threaded socket on the top of the chassis -- you'd have to be pretty hardcore, though.

User reviews4

Add your review

Whistle Blower.'s avatar
2 stars out of 5

Whistle Blower. 4 February 2010

Good: Build Quality , Sound Quality and able to upgrade software.

Bad: Serious ventilation and internal battery issues.

Comment: Pure recalled the early models due to ventilation problems in that the inbuilt rechargeable battery was susceptible to overheat when being recharged.
Another important floor in its design was that when the internal rechargeable battery naturally came to the end of its life (after only 18 months with average use) the owner had to send the whole unit back to the manufacturer's to have the new battery installed at some considerable expense and inconvenience to the owner! The public would see this as a "con"
Given the above facts, it is not surprising that Pure quickly pulled this model off the market!
If the manufactures would have got the design right at launch, the Oasis would have made it big in the DAB world as some of its other features were very good if not outstanding.

George123's avatar
4 stars out of 5

George123 5 April 2009

Good: robust, weatherproof, reasonable quality sound

Bad: haven't found anything yet

Comment: We want a radio to carry out and use when swimming in the pool. This is fine.

We had an old radio which lasted about 3 days before adjusting it with a wet finger caused the controls to stop working. The Pure Oasis however has now been going for the best part of the year without any problems at all, and it is prodded with wet fingers every day

Yes it is bulky, but then it has also been dropped on a concrete floor couple of times, and that is done it no harm at all. Obviously it would not stand dunking in the pool, so we haven't tried that.

The sound quality is reasonable, we are quite happy not to have concert quality reproduction outdoors or when swimming. The controls are easy to use. It also makes a useful kitchen radio, and doesn't take up too much room on a worktop.

The only thing that has been less than perfect has been the inset rubber protective strips, coming out of their slots. However a dab with suitable clear rubber adhesive at the end of each strip has stopped that happening

Mike  Stewart's avatar
4.5 stars out of 5

Mike Stewart 11 January 2007

Good: Great sound, very portable, extremely robust and can be used virtually anywhere.

Bad: A bit on the heavy side, could do with a bigger screen.

Comment: Superb. It follows me everywhere round the house and garden.

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