In article , Geoffrey S.
Mendelson wrote:
Geoffrey S. Mendelson wrote:
They put out 2-3 watts which is more than enough for CW, and will "work
the world" on SSB if the band is open and uncrowded. Forcing a signal
through a "closed" band or the middle of a pileup requires 1kw output radio,
if you hope for success and that is not going to run off a battery.
Just as a comment here is a YouTube video which adds some information.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbz9yv9VQVc
He has several videos of his working stations during contests using his
Argo 509 (4 watts SSB on a good day). This is one of my favorite rigs,
although I really prefer the Triton 4 digital, which is a very similar
rig with 100 watt output (if you need it), and a digital readout instead
of the dial string.
Geoff.
Thanks very much for that follow-up report.
In a weak moment, I fell victim to my emotions and
ordered a brand-new 100 watt Yaesu 857D.
Hey, nobody is perfect! - I blame it all on the stress I am
presently suffering from studying for
my extra-class license.
I bought the "look-alike" (Collins) 300Hz CW filter on a
seperate order from WART electronics, because there were
no articles on the web about any narrower CW filters
being available.
(ones that do not "ring" excessively, that is)
I hope the passband of the Yaesu's last IF stage can be shifted to
one side, as I forgot to examine the spec's of the Yaesu in detail.
If I can cock the IF passband to one side, that might reduce the
interference from another CW station somewhat, I hope.
How does the Triton 4 digital compare against the Elecraft K3
in your opinion?
Mark