[FARC] FT-897D QRP

Joseph M. Durnal joseph.durnal at gmail.com
Thu May 1 16:33:21 EDT 2008


Most folks define QRP operation as 5 watts.  The lower the power, the
more you depend upon conditions.  Durning last year's Maryland & DC
QSO party I made contacts with several QRP statoins on 75 meters.  A
lot of them were strong to very strong because conditions were good.

73 de Joseph Durnal NE3R

On Thu, May 1, 2008 at 3:37 PM,  <kirktal7237 at msn.com> wrote:
> Just got an Yaesu FT-897D for portable use with the Buddipole antenna.  I'm running it on two NiMh battery packs which contrary to Ham radio dealer literature only provide 4 hours of continuous operation at 20 watts on HF not 8 hours.  The FT-897D automatically switches to 20 watts maximum RF power when using battery packs, I have no control over this.
>
> Now I haven't set up the Buddipole antenna yet, but I am using the FT-897D with my 40 meter inverted V dipole.  This dipole has given fair to marginal performance at 100 watts with other radios depending on band conditions.  Today using the FT-897D on 40 meters I made my first contact using 20 watts.  I reached Joliet, Illinois and got a confusing signal report.  Very weak signal but good audio, with 0 to 1 S-units on the meter.   The guy could barely copy me over the background noise.
>
> So this radio is evidently a QRP rig, not that there's anything wrong with that, and I was just wondering will I need some type of gain antenna like a beam to make this rig work?  I've been told that the right antenna with gain can be a good substitute for brute RF power and put out a fine signal.  Any thoughts on this?
>
> See you all at the luncheon tomorrow.
>
> 73
> KB3ONM
> Kirk
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> FARC mailing list
> FARC at mailman.qth.net
> http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/farc
>


More information about the FARC mailing list