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Posts Tagged ‘review’

Yeasu FT-950 - a review.

July 21st, 2009

It’s been 5 weeks now since I took receipt of my FT-950 so I think it’s about time I posted a proper review based on my experiences with the radio over that period. This won’t be a highly technical review based on test figures and technical data, rather it will be a user review based on how well the radio fulfils my requirements and how it compares to other radios I have owned.

The FT-950 is a complex radio that needs a significant amount of configuration and setup to get it working just the way you want it, but, having done that, it is a radio that performs very well. Highlights for me are DSP IF filtering, triple band stacking registers (which retain all band and mode appropriate settings - this is a very powerful feature) and the CW peaking contour facility.

I’m very pleased with my Yaesu FT-950 as it is significantly better than any other radio I have owned. It is more than capable of fulfilling all of my requiements for SSB, CW and data communications (especially RTTY and PSK31). If you would like to read more then the complete review is available on my Yaesu FT-950 page.

Dean Amateur Radio , ,

Yaesu FT-897 - first impressions…

March 30th, 2009

My FT-897 (purchased second hand) arrived about a week ago but was only used on receive for the first few days while I got the hang of the menu system and sorted out a new power supply. Out of the box I have to say that the pictures don’t do this radio justice.

Granted it’s what’s on the inside that really matters but it doesn’t hurt if a radio looks good on the desk. To that end the FT-897 is a good looking radio!

The Yaesu FT-897D

…Hello Yaesu FT-897D

In use I have found the menu system simple enough but if you’re used to a more sophisticated user interface you may find some of the key presses required to effect a change in the radio’s setup to be a little bit long winded. My other radio is a Kenwood TS-480SAT and that radio has a very nice user interface - by comparison I am finding the Yaesu FT-897 to be a bit cumbersome.

Receive performance on HF is good and the radio does benefit from audio DSP noise reduction. This does significantly quieten what is otherwise a pretty noisy receiver. There is also DSP bandwidth filtering which is effective in reducing adjacent channel interference to allow the desired signal to be better heard. This was put to particular use in the CQWW WPX SSB contest this past weekend. The receiver seems to cope quite well with crowded band conditions, although it should be noted I do have the W4RT 2.3KHz Collins SSB filter installed which no doubt helps in that regard.

By way of comparison I would say that the FT-897 is not as good as the TS-480 on HF receive but that should come as no real surprise as the TS-480 is HF+6m only and is designed for optimal HF performance. The FT-897 on the other hand covers HF+6m plus 2m and 70cm. The difference is hard to quantify and I couldn’t hear anything on the Kenwood that I couldn’t on the Yaesu - it’s just that the Kenwood seems more in control of the received signal and has better recovered audio that the FT-897.

I can’t say much yet about the transmit performance - I need a few on-air reports to compare a few settings before passing judgement. I hope to be able to conduct those tests in the next few weeks - I’ll report my findings then.

Overall, given it’s design intent, the FT-897 is in my opinion a very good radio. It seems to have ticked all the right boxes and arrived at a good compromise in terms of size, frequency coverage, operator convenience and performance.

I am now looking forward to taking the radio out into the field for some portable operations and antenna experimentation. Until then I’m enjoying using the radio in the shack where it is used for HF SSB, 2m and 70cm work while the TS-480 handles all other HF modes like CW, PSK31 and RTTY (and other digimodes).

In summary then, given what it sets out to achieve, I have to rate the Yaesu FT-897 a very good radio and one I look forward to owning and using for many years.

Dean Amateur Radio , , , , , ,