On 10/18/2013 12:04 PM, Barry N1EU wrote:
The form factor of the K3 means a lot more space on the desk but a lot less
space on the display - no full time display of important parameters like
bandwidth, shift,
My ears tell me what I need to know about bandwidth and shift.
power,
The K3 remembers power by band and mode. How often do you need to
change it? And why do you need to know? I set power output to whatever
it takes to drive my power amp to full output, and to do that, I look at
the power amp, not the rig.
mic gain/compression,
In TX mode, the display can be set to provide a readout of compression
(in dB) and ALC, or power out and SWR. That compression in dB is what
we need to know, not the mic gain and compression knob settings that it
takes to get there. So you're asking for stuff that simply does not matter.
monitor level,
That's the loudness of your voice in your headphones. Again, my ears
tell me this -- I don't care what the "dial" says.
etc etc.
etc. what?
You have to push a knob to see each value.
But I contend that a good operator simply does not need to know that
these things that are not displayed except when first setting the rig up
for an activity (like contesting or DXing). For example, when I'm
preparing for a contest, I study the rules, decide which category I want
to enter, run through all the bands setting power, bandwidth of the P3
display to fit that contest, verity that my computer playback and mic
levels are right, and tweak them if necessary. By the time the contest
starts, all the controls I need are the bandswitch (or N1MM), tuning
knob (or N1MM), RIT, XIT, and IF bandwidth, AF and RF gain. Every one of
those functions has a dedicated knob or button. On 30M and below, I may
also switch in an RX antenna or put the rig in diversity mode. Again,
there are front panel buttons for that. Yes, the front panel does not
tell you whether you have a separate RX antenna on the sub-RX, but if
your ears don't tell you that, you don't understand diversity. :)
And no parameters at all are visible about the subreceiver unless you switch
the display from main to sub.
I agree this is a shortcoming, but a few things about controlling the
2nd RX are the only things I think they missed out on. BUT -- two fast
pushes of the "copy A to B" button copies ALL of the settings of the
main RX to the second RX, which gets you 90% of the way to where you're
likely to want to go. For example, if I'm using the 2nd RX to monitor my
frequency in a pileup, I may want to listen wider than I'm listening to
the DX. But even that's easy to do. Simply set the wider bandwidth
before copying A to B, then set A narrower to hear the DX better.
There's plenty to like about the K3 and contesters have adopted it in
droves, but the form factor doesn't work for me.
You're right, that's a personal choice, but I've articulated the reasons
for my choices.
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