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bpnjensen wrote:
On Mar 2, 8:15 am, dxAce wrote: Joe Analssandrini wrote: On Mar 2, 10:14 am, dxAce wrote: And meanwhile, we sit and wait patiently for the new K + D offering... dxAce Michigan USA Dear "dxAce," Keep your eye on AOR-UK as well. It is possible, but only possible, that they may be introducing a new DSP receiver within the next year or so according to Richard Hillier. John Thorpe and some other radio designers would be involved with this receiver if it does, in fact, get the "go-ahead." You can write to him at for more information. He will reply to you. One can only hope that the price will be "reasonable," that is, within the reach of hobbyists. I will say this - it will HAVE to be a SUPERLATIVE design in order to improve upon the performance and quality of the AR7030 Plus, at least in my opinion. Unfortunately, I have NEVER been interested any AOR products. Most of it I think simply has to do with the way they look. Horrible. They just turn me off. dxAce Michigan USA- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Likewise here...and without a decent complement of knobs and switches to control functionality - that remove the need to resort to nested tech menus - the AOR is a nonstarter for me. Bruce Jensen I thought that way, too. Until I bought an HF-150. Using the software driven interface took a bit of getting used to, but I noticed fairly quickly, that there were none of the artifacts of switching with dedicated controls that I'd begun to notice, even on rigs as simple as my SW-2. And a year down the road, I wasn't having any of the artifacts of dirty switches I see so much of with electronics in this neck of the woods. So, when I went to the AR-7030+, I already had a reasonably good sense that control of parameters need not be a knobs-and-switches kind of affair. And the operating within the menu trees, while presenting a certain learning curve, became second nature fairly quickly, while capturing some pretty difficult signals that even R-71 had trouble sucking in. And the interface isn't as complicated as many have suggested it may be. The controlling menues are logically laid out, so most used functions are at the top. If you need to dig deeper, each layer of controls groups similar functions together, so as you work harder to capture that ephemeral signal, you can bring up complimentary functions with a single button press, as you need them, without having to renavigate the tree. Once you use it for any length of time, you'll not notice the lack of knobs and switches. Now, I will say that AR-7030+ is a bit small for someone as ham handed as I can be, but the operating system produces as fine a DXing experience as anything I've used to date. In a small package on the desktop, with plenty of room to grow on the inside. And as easy to operate as the Ten-Tec sitting next to it. The whole knobs-and-switches thing...I don't even notice anymore. |
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