Thursday, December 28, 2023

MERRY BELATED CHRISTMAS AND IT'S COUGH-DROP TIME

 

 

 

 MERRY CHRISTMAS!

(cough-cough)




Well, this was a Christmas to beat all - My in-laws came over on Christmas Eve for the very first time. I think it was a combination of Tamales, and seeing our new home that got 'em over here (TBH it was because our former residence of 13 years was too small to have more than a couple visitors). By the end of the night, Détente had been achieved and we agreed to swap locations on an every-other-year basis. 

I do think her dad liked the picture on the wall, that I took of her back in 2014 (It was one of those funny now stories, that I can almost laugh at now. We were driving to the annual Texas Frightmare Weekend event in Dallas when the transmission began going out rather quickly. It was only 40 miles left, and we did make it, although the transmission was pronounced D.O.A. after being towed to a shop). There's more to this story, but I'm trying to keep my Christmas message light in spirit.

PRETTY MUCH WHAT THEY SAW IN THE SHACK: RADIOS AND PHOTOS

You can barely make it out, but the Alinco DX-10 I'm reviewing is on top of the center heap, just below Robin's elbow, with a blue frequency readout. I haven't powered it OFF since the review began because when you're doing a review, and have a limited time for the initial testing, it helps to keep it on 24/7 simulating longer use of the radio.

Back to Christmas... I hope y'all had a good one! My side of the family came over Christmas afternoon and we were pretty tuckered out by the end of the night. I can definitely tell you that my granddaughter has some oomph when she does a "high five", but it's hard to turn down those "Give me a high five Grandpa" 'cause she's so darn cute.

 

                                The "High Fiver"

 

 

Tired as I/we were, I popped the memory card out of my steadfast companion: Fuji's X-T1, and copied all the photos onto the computer to edit the next morning.

But Mother Nature had different plans for us that day (and continues to do so) where I woke up with a high fever and chills, and Robin with a raging sore throat (worse today) and a clogged head. So my plans of editing everything and posting a "Merry Christmas" message on here and Facebook wasn't going to happen, much less much of anything else, because except for a wailing cat announcing it was time to feed her, we were asleep.

I'm better enough to edit the Christmas photos while in bed, using my laptop, then connecting to the main computer in the radio room and remotely writing this Blog post.

I've heard that the President George has hit our shores, and it was easy to find out by going to the ten or more radios channels I subscribe to, and almost all of them had their President George video already posted. I'll point out once again, that the President models that end with FCC are strictly 40ch radios that cannot be modified, thus making the tiny frequency display a waste of space.

So until next year - 

73

Woody



 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Monday, December 18, 2023

DEAR SANTA (A WOODY WISHLIST)


 

 DEAR SANTA...

 

 

 

 

 

 

I know it's too late for this year, and we've both been busy (My wife and I moving, You and your Elves working), so consider this my shortened Wishlist for 2024. I realize some of this is beyond your control, but it never hurts to ask.

  1. On the top of my list I would like you to permanently remove the number "1", not completely mind you, writing it down is okay, but I'd like it eliminated from being spoken.
  2. While I'm asking, you may as well eliminate certain words put together as phrases, from being spoken as well (examples: "Window Licker", "Get off MY channel", etc.). Along with this I'd like you to limit how many times one person repeats "Your off frequency" (I think up to 6 times is a reasonable request).
  3. I'd like for you or your chief elf to negotiate with Midland to bring the 79-290 back onto the market - under your watchful eyes.


     But don't half ass it like Midland did with the removable head of the unit. Much has been said about having a cable to remotely attach the head to the body, as many mobile ham radios have been doing for years. This could be done, but adding a cable for remote mounting of the head would require re-engineering the design because the volume, squelch, clarifier, and channel selector are on the main body, making it an expensive overhaul.

Permit me to suggest an alternative to all of the changes as they would most likely increase the overall size of the transceiver as well, which currently is pretty darn perfect as it is.  

My suggestion: Many complaints about mobile radios have to do with the ability (or lack of) to see the display under various lighting conditions. I think the Elf department for two-way radios could consult with their photographic counterpart section and borrow a feature that many digital cameras have had for years: An articulated screen that can be tilted up, down, and hinged on the left side to allow it to swing towards the driver, making it much easier to read, and safer for everyone else on the road because your eyes won't leave the road ahead of you as often, or as long. 

Expensive? Probably. But if you increase adjacent channel rejection, add a decent noise-blanker, and make the receiver less likely to be overloaded, you and your North Pole crew will have a product worth buying er, I mean dropping down the chimney and leaving under the tree for some lucky operator. 

In today's market there are many people spending $300+ for a CB radio that couldn't meet any of the criteria above. But if you and Midland come to terms, at the very least - an articulated screen would be a must have feature. 

 

 I've seen the photos of you reading letters from children, both young and young of heart, and I'm sure those reading glasses really help. Now take a look at the screen of a President McKinley -

 


Now imagine riding your sleigh and trying to read the frequency**. Do you let an elf steer while you put those reading glasses on the peer at it perilously?

Try it again, this time with the Midland -


 Lordy-Lordy, take those reading glasses off and relax. Channel number? Just press the FRQ button. That big frequency display is replaced by a just-as-big channel number.

I've been writing letters to you for years now. Some folk say I'm daft, or beating a dead horse, and maybe my mail has been sitting in the "Insufficient postage" bin all of these years, but I still can't help bringing up the Midland 79-290

The Grinch in me has some common sense advice for CB radio manufacturers overall:

  • ** If a radio can't be expanded (as any currently made, legal-in-the-US-CB can't), just get rid of the tiny frequency display. After all, it's not even a real reading of how accurately on frequency you're on. It's just a game between the PLL chip and your channel selector. If you turn the channel selector to channel 19, the PLL chip says to itself "Hmm, the channel selector says 19 so I'd better put 27.185 on the screen" - IT IS USELESS. Do something else with that space: A larger S/RF meter, or even a modulation percentage meter! (uh-oh...I'm making to much sense now...😉)
  • If you still want a frequency readout, then have a toggle button that switches from big channel number to big frequency readout.
  • Quick making the microphones that come with the radio feel so cheap! I don't care how you do it. Glue a big freak'n heavy washer inside the back cover to give it some heft if you have to. I can tell you that the first thing a ham operator does when they get their radio is NOT looking for a replacement hand microphone.

Well Santa, I could expand my wishlist as well as grinch a lot more, but it's a week from Christmas 2023, which means you're too busy to read letters meant for next year, and as for me - it's time to go outside and mow the lawn (after all, I am in Texas).

73
Woody

 (and to all a good night)

 


 

 

 


 

 

Saturday, December 16, 2023

LAST MONTH OF 2023 - REVIEW OF THE ALINCO DX-10 PT.1


GO AHEAD AND PINCH YOURSELVES - A NEW RADIO REVIEW TO END THE YEAR!


Hey, I'm pinching myself as well. For the most part, this 23rd year of the new century has been consumed by house hunting, negotiations, moving out of the old place (Monday - Friday, multiple trips by myself, and Saturday & Sunday, multiple trips with items whose size/weight made it take both Robin and I to move), followed by unpacking and getting things where there they're supposed to go. 

 

The review in question is Alinco's DX-10 10m radio. This is one of the radios that I looked the likes of back in 2015, but they were discontinued several years later. Imagine my surprise when I opened up my main Facebook page and saw that Bells CB had a new radio being announced - the Alinco DX-10!


Outwardly, it appeared as if there weren't any changes, which I considered a *PLUS* because, unlike a radio such as the President McKinley EU/FCC, the frequency readout was enormously easy to see, although when I get to reviewing that part of the radio there's a definite downside - and I can't understand why it couldn't be changed. But more about that when I get to it.


Also, before I get any further, Bells did not send me a radio to review, but I like to give credit when credit is due. As far as I know, they were the only ones that had them in stock and I paid for it out of my own pocket. I did not choose the tuneup/alignment add-on because I was curious about how it would perform taken right from the box and plugged into my power supply.


The shipping box lead me to believe this was a much larger radio than I thought, but it turned out that Bells just packs it very well (thank you Bells), which required a larger box. But the actual radio box is slightly smaller than the President McKinley or Uniden's 980SSB. 

IN THE BOX

  • Radio
  • Manual
  • Microphone
  • Mounting bracket for radio and microphone, along with all of the necessary screws, etc.

As I mentioned earlier, the sole reason for buying this was due to the larger digital display, and you have several different colors to chose from.

Once space was made on the bench I powered the radio on, and noticed one thing immediately: The channel number display is a very bright, almost lime/yellow color, but the digital frequency readout was definitely not as bright, and there didn't seem to be a way to change that. This was with the radio at the same level as my eyes, but I noticed an improvement in brightness once the radio was at a lower angle then my eyes, so all is not lost.

The menu system is explained in the manual fairly well, enough so that when I wasn't getting any audio output I knew enough to check it's setting, which for some reason came set to 0. After trying several settings I found 31 to be the best for my voice.

Speaking about audio, the stock hand mic kinda sucks. Audio from it was slightly muffled and it felt worse in my hand than a President stock mic did (as a point of reference), so I ended up borrowing the President digi-mic from my McKinley and gave it go. The results: BIG improvement. So at some point I'll have to get another one of these microphones vs. multiple screw off / screw back on, as I switched between radios.

 


 Not surprisingly, the LED readout looks good via my camera (but so did the President Lincoln II). Starting from the left:

  • A-F band buttons that divide 10 meters into 40 channel segments. Just below it is your microphone connector.
  • Moving right there are 8 buttons, in two rows of 4 that perform different functions. To changed anything (like your microphone audio output) you'll definitely be using the FUNC, or Function button.
  • Next to is the RB/BP button (for Roger Beep and regular beep). I almost forgot to mention that this radio had the loudest, most annoying BEEP you'll ever hear, and hear it you will when doing mundane operations, like changing channels.
  • Still moving to the right we have the NB/ANL & Lock button. I've found the NB/ANL to be just as lacking as it is on everything these days. To date, nothing works as well as the older Uniden and Cobra radio built from 1977-Mid 90's. The lock button simply locks your panel to prevent you from pressing or moving the wrong thing while you're driving.



  • The last button on the top row is for your dual channel watch and LCD OFF button.
  • On the bottom row we'll start on the left with the SCAN and SC LIST (scan list) button. You'll find information on that in the manual.
  • Next is a +10KHz and Hi-Cut button, which limits the treble in your receive audio.
  • To the right of this is a button marked COL and TOT. COL will change your frequency display colors each time you press it. And TOT is your Time out control that you can set to turn off the transmit just in case you butt has been transmitting so long the radio gets overly hot, or as the manual explains it:
(2)FUNC+ COL
When pressing this key, TOT ON or TOT OFF would display on the LCD for 2 seconds. Repeat this operation to switch ON/OFF the function. When ON appears on the LCD, users can press PTT to transmit. Then, the radio would time the transmitting duration. Once the duration is beyond the set TOT time (programmable), the radio would emit voice prompt and stop transmitting and back to receiving
state automatically. This function aims to protect the radio against power tube damage from superheating caused by long transmission.

 

  • Lastly, there's a button marked EMG on top and S-RF on the bottom. EMG is takes you to the emergency channel which in this case changed frequencies to ch.19, then another press of the button brings you back to the channel/frequency you were just talking on. S-RF seems a bit stupid to me. Its function is to remove the S-RF meter from the screen and/or put it back again.



Sticking with the left side of the front panel, and below the buttons you'll find your mode switch to change functions to PA, CW, AM, FM, USB, and LSB. To the right of that selector is the on-off, volume & squelch controls.

Next up is your Echo-Tone controls (or echo "off"). If I forget, remind me to bring up the Echo again. Moving further to the right is the RF Gain and RF Power controls. Before purchasing this radio I'd read that the model sold several years ago had a very sensitive receiver that could be over loaded by strong signals. Nothing has changed in this respect. You'll realize your RF Gain is set too high when stations become garbled or "fuzzy" sounding.

I recommend backing the gain way down. It will help combat this issue, and make your receiver a lot less noisy. I was rather glum about turning the RF Gain down so far but one day I ran across a particularly weak station around 28.400 while spinning the "wheel of fortune" (VFO) on my ICOM IC-705, then switched to the DX-10 and to my surprise it seemed more sensitive, not a lot, but just enough to hear the other station better. As a triple check I then switched over to my faithful Kenwood TS-50 and received the same results. So even with the RF Gain control backed off, I could hear the weaker station better than the other two radios! BTW, I had the ICOM's power amp set to 2. When I turned it off completely I couldn't understand what the other station was saying at all. The moral of the story: Having a hot receiver isn't so bad, provided you can control the RF Gain.



The last two control are the clarifier and channel selector. The clarifier is adjustable by pushing the knob in briefly. Each push changes how much the clarifier will adjust the frequency. These changes are called STEPS in the owners manual, with the default step being 10Hz. Each press of the control increases the size of the steps as follows: 10Hz, 100Hz, 1KHz, and 10KHz before returning back to 10Hz.

My personal preference is 10Hz. Being the smallest change, it makes it's easier to tune a station so that you'll both be in sync. The only thing I don't like about the clarifier is the click-click-click sound it makes while making an adjustment. I wonder how long that control will last before it starts skipping clicks that no longer work?

One more point about the Clarifier is that you can make it a receive-only, transmit-only, or receive/transmit tied together (my preference).



The rear of the DX-10 looks like many of the modern radios. A larger heat sink and sparse connections, which are:

  • SO239 coax connector
  • CW key connector
  • USB connector for software programming
  • External speaker jack
  • And a standard 3-pin power connector

SIZE

By placing my President McKinley on top of the DX-10 I thought it would give you an idea of how the compare.
 

 
The McKinley is slightly taller, and as you can see, the DX-10 makes better use of the front panel by not only having a separate channel selector, but a longer display for your frequency, which has nice large numbers.
 
This brings up a pet peeve of mine. I've read several manufacturers say that it's not the easiest to have a channel number and frequency display in the same space, thus the tiny frequency readouts you'll see with the President McKinley, Uniden, and other such radios.
 
If you've been a faithful reader of this Blog you already know what's coming.... "I CALL BULLCRAP" about this excuse. Over two decades ago Midland was able to do this in such a simple way:
 

 Their 79-290 AM-SSB mobile had large frequency numbers, but if you wanted to see the channel number, all you had to do was press the FRQ button on the front panel. That button would toggle the display between channel number and frequency. I may be wrong, but I don't think anyone has done this every since. Interested in the Midland? Do a search within my Blog for the review, along with links to other reviewers (one from Popular Communications magazine). Okay, my rant has ended, so back to the review...
 
 
 
 
From this side view it's obvious that the McKinley is not as deep as the Alinco and its heat sink which may be a deciding factor when trying to determine which radio would fit best in your vehicle.
 
"As far as the microphone, I'd send it to the Island of misfit mics and pickup a President Digi-mic" 
 
 So, back to the Echo feature. I'm not a fan of echo on most radios, but some of them allow for such fine tuning that it's just barely noticeable. This one doesn't have a fine adjustment and I didn't care for it, as well as the click-click-click Clarifier tuning. 
 
As far as the microphone, I'd send it to the Island of misfit mics and pickup a President Digi-mic. 
 
I've reached the end of Part 1, because I'd like a week or two more of daily use, as well as discussing the software and USB cable required to program it. But before I go, I'd like to thank the staff of BELLS CB!
 
All of our communications were done via Facebook Messenger (they have a page of their own), and every response but one was replied quickly. The one that took a little longer was one that they apologized for. They had to contact the manufacturer and the manufacturer wasn't as quick to reply as BELLS CB was. From my experience with them regarding the DX-10 I'd rate their after sale support as top notch!

Along with the other additions in Part 2 I'll include a few photos of the inside as well.

I've been asked over the years on when I'd return to video reviews. Except for some non speaking antenna reviews I haven't done a full face, talking review since around 2001, but if I get the equipment I need I may indeed return to that format, as for now, you're stuck with reading this and all of its spelling and grammatical issues...and Ooops! I forgot to mention this radio can be converted to 11m (at your own peril of having "Uncle Charlie" come knocking on your front door)


73

Woody









Sunday, June 18, 2023

HAPPY FATHER'S DAY 2023

 



ENJOY THE DAY...






Well, this first post of 2023 will be short with lots of eye candy. I've been preparing to move / downsize and it's been tough deciding which radios will be moved, sold, donated, or trashed (yup, at least six dumped so far, with another 6-10 to follow). Enough of that - it's Father's Day, so enjoy the eye candy...


EYE CANDY

Back in April I scanned a Midland electronics catalog from 1976, so enjoy your Fathers day, kick back and enjoy the pix!









 
 




 
 
 






































 
 
 
SUNDAY IS FUNDAY





 
 

 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 

 
 
 
 
 



 




73,

WOODY