[Elecraft] Modularity

EricJ eric.csuf at gmail.com
Wed Apr 17 20:14:28 EDT 2019


For me, that would be ham radio hell. My ideal radio has knobs. A big 
one for tuning, little ones for other things. Knobs and buttons. I'm not 
knocking Flex at all, but if that were the only radio or all radios 
worked like that, I'd just do woodworking.

Some people like tuning. Some people like point-and-shoot. Knobs for the 
former, panadapters for the latter. Don W3FPR lamented earlier that hams 
no longer seem to know how to wire up a simple cable with a different 
connector at each end. I lament that hams no longer seem to be able to 
tune or enjoy the experience.

I think Elecraft understands both kinds of hams.

Eric KE6US

On 4/17/2019 12:30 PM, Allan Zadiraka wrote:
> I agree with Victor's comments.  I am all in favor of the elimination of
> the all-in-one, big box rigs.  No vendor in the amateur radio market can be
> the premiere supplier in all areas even though Elecraft is trying hard. I
> don't consider them the best panadapter HMI vendor or best paddle
> manufacturer.  What I would consider ideal is a rig, computer, and other
> "boxes" which sit behind or below the operating desk (or at a remote
> site).  On the desk, a keyboard, mouse and/or trackball, an advanced KPod
> with a few more knobs and customizable LCD keys for the major rig control
> and antenna  functions and monitor(s) for the waterfall, frequency
> readouts, SWR/POWER indicators, RF waveform display and logging displays.
>
> An enclosure to corral all the miscellaneous "boxes" and their wiring would
> also be nice.
>
>
> zeke, ab8oou
>
>
>
>
>
> On Wed, Apr 17, 2019 at 1:13 AM Vic Rosenthal <k2vco.vic at gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> All this talk about onboard computers (or not) and operating systems in
>> the K4 has me thinking.
>> My K3 is serial no. 0007. I have had it since the beginning, and with a
>> few simple upgrades, it is almost as capable as a new K3S. But the
>> computers I had back then are long gone.
>> What I would like to have in the K4 is a backplane architecture. The
>> entire radio except for a control head would be located on plugin boards
>> that could be swapped out easily for testing, customizing, or upgrading.
>> The ENTIRE radio. The K3 goes in this direction, but not far enough.
>> One of the options would be an onboard computer. You could use the rig
>> without it or with an external computer if you wish. Maybe it would come
>> with some version of Linux, but you could put another version of Linux or
>> Windows on it if you wanted. You could upgrade it easily when it became
>> obsolete.
>> Yes, this would cost more. But with the savings available from modern
>> automated surface mount construction, maybe it’s possible.
>>
>> Victor 4X6GP
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