Hi Butch, how are you doing my friend? Give me a phone call when you have a
minute. BTW, I really like my new 480SAT, though I have no need of the
builtin tuner, since the rig is only used to drive my six meter amplifier.
73
Alan R. Downing
Phoenix, AZ
-----Original Message-----
From: For blind ham radio operators [mailto:[log in to unmask]]
On Behalf Of Butch Bussen
Sent: Saturday, November 16, 2013 2:54 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: The new world of ham radio: is this science fiction?
It isn't that complicated at all. No more complicated than older
kenwood radios. It speaks even more than the 480. You can read alc and
so forth. The buttons mostly turn things on and off, say the noise
blanker. If you hold in that same button, it lets you adjust its
setting. Truse me, the rig is not bad at all to learn. Not nearly as
complicated as my 990 which if recall has 105 buttons and knobs on the
front pannel.
73
Butch
WA0VJR
Node 3148
Wallace, ks.
On Fri, 15 Nov 2013, Dr. Ronald E. Milliman wrote:
> I would love to have a TS-590, but I've read the manual, and it sounds
> soooooooo complicated. If you press a button it does one thing; press it
> again, and it does the opposite, and if you press and hold it for 2
seconds,
> it does something entirely differently. Then, what is this USB data and
LSB
> data stuff? I've been inactive for a few years, and I feel like I'm in a
> totally different world of ham radio. Do you people really fully
understand
> and use all of the buttons, features and functions on rigs like the TS-590
> and the TM-V71A?
>
> Ron, K8HSY
>
>
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