[VHFcontesting] Icom IC-9100 Yahoo Group

Les Rayburn les at highnoonfilm.com
Sun Aug 23 10:33:52 PDT 2009


Someone has already started a Yahoo Group for the IC-9100, so I expect we'll hear more about this rig on that group soon. I'm a member of Yahoo Groups for each of the radios that I own, and have found them to be very helpful. 

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ic9100/

It terms of the Flexradio VHF/UHF effort, I was disappointed on what I could hear from the representatives at the Huntsville Hamfest. Hard to be critical of an upgrade that is still literally "vaporware" at this point, but some of the disappointments for me were:

1.) No 222 MHz. Flexradio is aware enough of the VHF/UHF weak signal community market to offer a low priced transverter version of their radio, but not aware enough to offer 222 on their VHF/UHF converter? 

2.) It's only available for their highest priced radio, the Flex 5000. This unit is large, bulky, and really won't work well for rovers. 

3.) By their own admission, it will be expensive. 

4.) Limited output power on both bands (though enough to drive amps). It would have been great to see 100 watts on all bands. 

Having used the SDR-IQ receiver during the UHF Contest in August, it's easy to see the advantage of the large bandscopes, and I imagine that they'd be useful in other ways on 6 Meters. It sure made finding the "DEMI Drifters" a lot easier on 222, and 902. My plan was to wait to purchase a new rig until someone offered a true VHF/UHF SDR that offered 6 Meters thru 432, but the Icom may change my mind. 

The military is already using SDR's that cover all of the VHF range from 40mhz to over 500mhz. I've seen prototypes of public service SDR's that offer basically the same coverage. I wish that one of the Big Three would embrace this technology and start offering something other than big boxes with lots of knobs. But based on what I saw at Huntsville, they all seem content to continue to turn those out...complete with Hi-Fi microphones, lots of buttons to tailor your transmit audio, and big screen TV's to display your bandscope. They remind me of the "tweak" audiophile products of the 1980's. 

I'm excited about the IC-9100 because I've owned the IC-746 and Pro model for over a decade. Above average performance in an affordable, "do it all" box. If Icom continues that tradition, it's hard to see how you could go wrong buying one. 

73,

Les Rayburn, N1LF
EM63nf
121 Mayfair Park
Maylene, AL 35114


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