Yaesu CW Filters

Started by Rowsey1108, July 10, 2018, 08:56:54 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Rowsey1108

  I've been thinking about getting a CW Filter for my Yaesu FT-818 instead of buying a separate QRP CW transceiver. I saw 3 different Yaesu ones but not sure which one would be the best. Does anyone have experience with any of them?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

RadioRay

I work CW almost exclusively and had the narrowest (250Hz) filter in my FT817s through the years. It made the 817 into a very good CW transceiver.  I highly recommend it for CW operators.

RadioRay ...- .-

"When we cannot do the good we would, we must be ready to do the good we can."  ~ Matthew Henry

Rowsey1108

Good to hear! I'm assuming that's the narrowest band? Why would someone choose one of the other two filters for the Yaesu?
  I've got a leg mounted straight key I plan on using with the setup. Thanks for the reply.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

gil

I think around 400Hz works great.
Gil

Sent from my SM-G928F using Tapatalk


Jon_Garfio

I bought for my 817 a 455khz filtre CW.
Works great and makes the rig runs well on cw Mode.

However 817/818 is not a good plattform for morse Code, in fact, I sold it and get a Elecraft K2.



Enviado desde mi Redmi Note 4 mediante Tapatalk

Sapere aude

Rowsey1108

Quote from: gil on July 10, 2018, 05:31:52 PM
I think around 400Hz works great.
Gil

Sent from my SM-G928F using Tapatalk
Thank you for the feedback.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Rowsey1108

Quote from: Jon_Garfio on July 10, 2018, 05:42:52 PM
I bought for my 817 a 455khz filtre CW.
Works great and makes the rig runs well on cw Mode.

However 817/818 is not a good plattform for morse Code, in fact, I sold it and get a Elecraft K2.



Enviado desde mi Redmi Note 4 mediante Tapatalk
Thank you


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Sparks

Quote from: Jon_Garfio on July 10, 2018, 05:42:52 PMHowever 817/818 is not a good plattform for morse Code, in fact, I sold it and get a Elecraft K2.

Please tell us more. I am considering selling my two years old and unused FT817ND.

Why do you consider it not a good platform for Morse code (CW)?

gil

The Elecraft K2 only comes as a kit. You can find used ones. It is an 80-10m CW transceiver, which can be extended to 160m and SSB. There is even a 100W option. Power is 14W. I built one a few years ago and it is an excellent radio for CW. The receiver is very sensitive and had good filtering. It is not a particularly difficult kit but takes a long time to build because of the number of components. Elecraft still sells it but my guess is that 2018 might be its last year... Let's hope not... It does cost a lot new but is worth every penny.

QuoteWhy do you consider it not a good platform for Morse code (CW)?
Probably because you need to buy an extra filter for CW, and the receiver isn't as sensitive. I never used one but I suspect it does work fine, just not as well as an Elecraft. No other radio offers as much in such a small package though.

Gil.

Jon_Garfio

#9
817 is a swiss army knife, has all but no good in nothing.

If you are not a ultra fan of CW, perhaps 817 runs fine for your propuse but in my case, the 99.9% of HF QSO are CW mode, I want more performance, selectivity and tools to make posible better contacts.

Quote from: Sparks on July 11, 2018, 12:46:45 PM
Please tell us more. I am considering selling my two years old and unused FT817ND.

Why do you consider it not a good platform for Morse code (CW)?


Enviado desde mi Redmi Note 4 mediante Tapatalk
Sapere aude

caulktel

I feel like have to defend the FT-817 :D I love my FT-817ND but I only use it for SSB and I'm very happy with the performance. I do have the Inrad SSB filter installed. YMMV.

Joel
N6ALT

gil

I don't think the 817 needs defending. It is no doubt a great radio.
Gil

Sent from my SM-G928F using Tapatalk


CroPrepper

Quote from: Jon_Garfio on July 11, 2018, 12:52:07 PM
817 is a swiss army knife, has all but no good in nothing.


That's what its all about when getting a radio for preparedness. It's good for establishing contacts with low power drain, key factor. It's small, lightweight and ultraportable, but you still have HF VHF and UHF and all the modes you can wish for.

Jon_Garfio

Yes, You got the right about It.
In fact, when I sold my 817, I bought a VHF rig plus the Elecraft because I want both bands.

With 817 you have all-in-one multi propose.

Anyway, if you become a cw fanatic, You need a high level performance rig than 817.
Quote from: CPR on July 13, 2018, 03:06:59 AM
That's what its all about when getting a radio for preparedness. It's good for establishing contacts with low power drain, key factor. It's small, lightweight and ultraportable, but you still have HF VHF and UHF and all the modes you can wish for.

Enviado desde mi Redmi Note 4 mediante Tapatalk

Sapere aude

CroPrepper

From Hamradio view that is surely true. but in SHTF I think most of the radio users will be SSB and not CW. The best thing is to know CW that's for sure. But the majority can't decipher it unfortunately. Sorry for offtopic.