Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks for taking the time to read this. I know next to nothing about
this topic, however, the radio is not for me. It's for my dad. He was very active in radios from around WWII thru the 50s. His job and family came first though, so I guess he had to let some of his hobbies go. Since he's retired and doesn't get around as well as he used to, he's thinking about getting back into radio. I think he got "sticker shock" when he looked at a trade magazine recently. I tried to tell him we aren't in the 50s anymore and he said "Yea, but dam they're high." Based on articles, I've seen, the prices for a typical HF rig these days isn't all that much different from the prices for rigs back in the 1950s, once you adjust for inflation. My question is: How much should an 80 meter radio w/antenna sell for? The cost for a usable antenna should be very modest, if your dad has room to put up a simple wire dipole in the back yard. You can make a serviceable antenna using wire and insulators available from any decent hardware or homebuilding store. $25-$50 in materials ought to do it, if everything is bought new, and the cost can be brought down to next to nothing if you have leftover wire from another project and/or are good at scrounging. As for a radio... $750 would get an FT-857D compact (HF/VHF/UHF all-mode). $870 would get the FT-897D - essentially the same radio in a larger, base-type package. Other 100-watt HF rigs seem to start in the same basic price range... around $1000 is a common price point. CW-only or lower-power radios are somewhat less. If by "80 meters" you literally mean the CW end of the band only - if your dad isn't a phone guy - then something like this might do? If he wants sideband and/or AM as well, then a full-function radio would probably be called for. The least-expensive new 75-meter LSB-only transceiver I know of at the moment is the MFJ-9475X, at $270, and it might not have the power or reliability that your dad would want. We're not talking top of the line here, but quality and reliability are important (as is cost). In your place (and his) I'd seriously consider going with a used radio. They're not hard to come by, as active hams upgrade to newer radios and as old radios become available through silent-key sales and auctions. Hooking up with a local ham-club would probably be a good idea. Putting the word out at a meeting or two that he's looking for a serviceable-but-not-fancy HF rig might very well turn up a few that people have sitting on their shelves. I'd expect that he'd probably be able to get something decent (maybe 5-10 years old) for perhaps half the price of a new radio of similar basic capabilities. Some of the ham-radio dealers have used equipment for sale (either radios they have accepted for tradein, or as consignment sales). Local ham-radio fleamarkets, auctions on eBay, and online swapmeet sales on QRZ.COM are all possibilities. One has to be careful, though, to make sure that one is being sold a radio which actually works properly and hasn't had all of the Magic Blue Smoke escape. That's one reason I suggest a local (hamclub) acquisition - you'll at least know where the seller hangs out :-). Test the radio carefully before buying, or get an iron-clad right-of-return-within-30-days guarantee. A few years ago I got somewhat lucky, and managed to buy a Ten-Tec 555 Scout with a bunch of band modules and a power supply for only $300. This is a 50-watt sideband radio with individual plug-in modules for the bands - a bit quirky but very usable - it was my HF-mobile radio for about three years. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Friends of Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Is a ICOM 751A decent receiver | Shortwave | |||
Transmitter / Receiver question | Broadcasting | |||
FS: Heath DX-60 Transmitter; GR-78 Receiver | Swap | |||
FS: Heath DX-60 Transmitter: GR-78 Receiver | Boatanchors | |||
FA: Gonset G-66B Receiver / G-77 Transmitter Pkg | Boatanchors |