A look through the ARRL product reviews should tell you what you need to know in an objective fashion.
Having said that, sensitivity is probably not the best parameter on which to judge a potential transceiver. Poor sensitivity can be cured with a preamp. Not so poor strong signal handling performance or ergonomics.
I have a TS2000X, which is only mediocre in sensitivity and strong signal handling capability, but has good ergonomics. It is useful as an HF backup rig and I use it for VHF/UHF roving, at which it excels. It also has a 1296 option. With an outside antenna the notorious birdie is not a problem.
All of the all-mode VHF transceivers have their pluses and minuses. Some are more show stoppers than others. These kinds of rigs are compromises and once one decides on what compromises one can make, selection is easier. The highest performance option, a pair (or more) of transverters, can be a task to integrate, is expensive, has primitive ergonomics, and requires two IF transceivers for satellite work.
Let us know what you decide. — Duffey KK6MC
On Apr 29, 2017, at 8:50 AM, Dave Mann cwo4mann@comcast.net wrote:
Please help me out with critical comments about receiver sensitivity vis-a-vis the venerable FT-736R and latest 2-m/70-cm all-mode transceivers best suited for AMSAT work.
Thanks in advance, Dave N4CVX
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