Greetings everyone, I am currently studying for the General classThe iCOM IC-7300 really is the standard "go-to" for an HF rig now days. Its supported by all the software for doing digital modes, has great features, and sounds great.
license (my license is expiring in 2.5y) and am wondering what recommendations would be for an entry level HF rig? I hear the Xigu
series aren't too bad, but I am wondering what other
recommendations there are? I understand that I can operate some HF
freqs with just my Tech license, but I would like to upgrade ;)
I understand that I can operate some HF freqs with just my Tech
license, but I would like to upgrade ;)
Hello, debian.
On 7/30/22 11:35 PM you wrote:
Greetings everyone, I am currently studying for the General class license (my license is expiring in 2.5y) and am wondering what recommendations would be for an entry level HF rig? I hear the Xigu series aren't too bad, but I am wondering what otherThe iCOM IC-7300 really is the standard "go-to" for an HF rig now days. Its supported by all the software for doing digital modes, has great features, and sounds great.
recommendations there are? I understand that I can operate some HF
freqs with just my Tech license, but I would like to upgrade ;)
It was my first HF rig, and it's done everything I've wanted it to thus far.
I can't recommend it enough.
--
Cool! Thanks for the recommendations! I will look into them. Do anyThe IC-7300 does, all you need is a USB cable (preferably with ferries on it)
of these have a built in TNC by chance? Not a deal breaker for me
as I have a few TNCs and sound modems at my disposal..
You cant go wrong with an Icom IC-718. Its one of the best entry level rigs Icom has ever made. They sell for around $500
Sysop: | DaiTengu |
---|---|
Location: | Appleton, WI |
Users: | 991 |
Nodes: | 10 (0 / 10) |
Uptime: | 145:08:01 |
Calls: | 12,962 |
Files: | 186,574 |
Messages: | 3,266,507 |