Methinks that people are forgetting the big picture.
Most, if not all, here want dependability, reliability, and repeatability in
their rigs -
especially ones that costs ~$4000. Is that *really* too much to ask? TTs
competition doesn't
seem to think so. If I wanted an experimental rig I'd go out and buy a
SDR-1000.
While the Orion's hardware seems to be up to the task (albeit getting a little
long in the tooth) TT firmware seems to have lingering problems. I gather TT
software
engineering has been more than a little taxed trying to implement a bug free
SDR HF XCVR.
Real-time software is a bear unless done exactly right - the last 2+ years of
upgrades
has shown that they haven't. Indeed, going from a 1.x release to a 2.x release
indicates
that they probably programmed themselves into a corner, so to speak. "When all
else
fails do a rewrite!" Let's see if they can get it right with the v2 firmware.
If not, maybe
they should open up the firmware development to the FS/OS software community
(ala GNURadio)
and get it done right HIHI :)
Please, don't misunderstand me, I'm not bashing TT or the Orion. TT seems to be
a fine
company and the Orion has the potential of being a fine rig worth its asking
price. I
just don't think people are happy in spending ~$4000 on a SDR whose firmware is
still
very much beta quality and a work in progress. I'm curious what's happening to
TTs reputation
in all of this? Surely it can't be good. Indeed, one has to wonder how many
people bear with
TT and their Orion in the hopes that TT will fix the problems and that the
Orion will get
better because they don't want to admit that they spent their hard earned $$$
on a subpar,
even flaky radio?
For these reasons I'm holding off my Orion purchase until v2 of the firmware
comes out and
the Orion owners/users/abusers have their say. I don't demand a *perfect* radio.
Just one that doesn't hang or require a HW reset because I twiddled a knob the
wrong way -
one that works reliably and predictably when I want it and when I need it.
Harry Reed, AB7YF
><<<I just can't see any viable reason to not try/own an Orion. Especially
>any technical reasons.>>>
>
>I'd go through the reflector archive for the past 2-3 years and look
at what earlier >purchasers went through.
>
>If you have a lot of free time to tinker, maybe it's okay. For example
if you are >retired and have a lot of patience maybe it's okay.
>
>I'm pretty low on time and patience. I want dependability. I want to
be able to unbox >the rig, power it up, hook an antenna to it, ground,
mic, key, cans...whatever i >need, adjust collector PA current and mic
gain, adjust AF/RF gain, tune around, hit >the PTT button and start
making contacts.
>
>If it's much more involved than that, or its behavior mysteriously
changes from one >day to the next on a regular basis, then I start
loosing interest.
>
>So the likes and dislikes probably have as much to do with operator
personality as >anything else.
>
>rob/k5uj
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