A lot of the time, you don't have to QSY much on CW, so the step isn't all that super important. Just pick a spot and give out a few CQ's. Of course you have to have some other receiver than the HT unless it receives SSB/CW.
(I used to get some SSB/CW QSO's on the old birds) Call CQ on CW and get a SSB answer or vice-versa.. Of course at that time most folks could copy CW.
73 John
I was doing some testing here at home with this. I used an IC-W32A and IC-T7H with a straight key plugged into the mic jack on each radio. Nothing fancy from the key, just an adapter to fit the 3/32" (2.5mm) jack, and I could key the transmitter. When I did this, listening on another radio, I could hear only the carrier. No audio was coming from the HTs' built-in mics.
I might try this on FO-29 this evening, and maybe VO-52. One additional drawback with an HT for a CW transmitter is the fact that most HTs (including these two I tried this morning) have 5 kHz as the smallest tuning step. I also have an FT-817ND, but I only have one of those radios. Otherwise, I would be trying all of this with a pair of FT-817s and making some CW and SSB contacts.
73!
Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK
How about the Kenwood TH-F6? FM transmit, SSB/CW receive, though not at the same time (not fdx). The all-mode "B" side is a little less sensitive than "A", but it still might be worth a try. (Of course, the CW neurons between the ears will need a bit of polishing...)
Greg KO6TH
----Original Message Follows---- From: John W Lee k6yk@juno.com To: amsat-bb@wd9ewk.net CC: amsat-bb@amsat.org Subject: [amsat-bb] Re: CW from an FM HT Date: Sat, 28 Oct 2006 16:06:35 -0700
A lot of the time, you don't have to QSY much on CW, so the step isn't all that super important. Just pick a spot and give out a few CQ's. Of course you have to have some other receiver than the HT unless it receives SSB/CW.
(I used to get some SSB/CW QSO's on the old birds) Call CQ on CW and get a SSB answer or vice-versa.. Of course at that time most folks could copy CW.
73 John
I was doing some testing here at home with this. I used an IC-W32A and IC-T7H with a straight key plugged into the mic jack on each radio. Nothing fancy from the key, just an adapter to fit the 3/32" (2.5mm) jack, and I could key the transmitter. When I did this, listening on another radio, I could hear only the carrier. No audio was coming from the HTs' built-in mics.
I might try this on FO-29 this evening, and maybe VO-52. One additional drawback with an HT for a CW transmitter is the fact that most HTs (including these two I tried this morning) have 5 kHz as the smallest tuning step. I also have an FT-817ND, but I only have one of those radios. Otherwise, I would be trying all of this with a pair of FT-817s and making some CW and SSB contacts.
73!
Patrick WD9EWK/VA7EWK
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participants (2)
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Greg D.
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John W Lee