A couple of items pertaining to the Yaesu FTA-750L:
If you have ever been a database manager, it will help. Group names, etc,etc. I am currently grouping by State.
There are a lot of things that are not intuitive, and the documentation does not give clear or real world examples.
Selecting a format for Latitude and Longitude is definitely NOT intuitive and they don't give examples.
Use the airport location coordinates (not runway) for GPS.
Use the runway coordinates (not location) for ILS nav entries.
I still haven't figured out if I need to do "Split" frequencies for ILS or is it automatic.
The programming function is limited to Windows machines.
The programming application is easy to install and use. And tedious to use. Typing, typing, typing.
But not nearly as tedious as doing it on the radio itself.
I need write something to pull the info from an existing FAA database and just plug it in for me.
I think I will experiment with "Trip" lists. Program in every station (plus alternates and nav frequencies) in the order of use then just step through as required.
When you are programming the radio, it must be in CP Mode. Easy to do. Plug in the USB cable Hold "Menu" and push the power on button, then release "Menu".
When you are doing Firmware Upgrades you do not use CP Mode. Just plug in the USB cable and turn on the radio. Run UPCHK. exe to make sure you actually need the upgrade. Weird.
There is no Yaesu users group, which really surprises me. Yaesu is missing an opportunity here.
I doubt they’ve got support for the Aviation radios, but if the open source CHIRP software does support that rig, it’s my go-to for programming these days, mostly because it supports so much gear that I can keep my programming databases all in one piece of software for any rig type.
The oddities you described about how they handle the USB and firmware vs programming are really common on most rigs today.
User group... background... Yaesu is part/same as Vertex and both are owned by Motorola these days. Their “consumer” devices act more like commercial radios which in general are programmed by someone else for you, unless you’re the fleet radio engineer, and the user doesn’t change anything on the rig. Therefore, user interfaces for things like Aviation where the user operates their own radio settings, kinda naturally blow chunks... compared to any rig that is designed as a user-operated rig.
They probably have zero interest in user groups or social media, because they’re usually forcing contact with them through the “authorized” radio managers or a dealer for 99% of their product line. Aviation and dealing directly with the radio users, is probably just a minor annoyance to them. Amateur which is a much larger piece of their product line is still dwarfed by commercial and public safety, and the support isn’t great there, either.
This is Mother M after all, who’s idea of “great support” is charging $250 a year for their programming software (that looks and operates no better than the stuff you’re using for free on consumer products) in 1000 radio public safety deployments... or a single user deployment. They’re not jerks, but their usual customer is a fleet, so they just don’t care. Which...
Is driving the move to $30 cheap Chinese radios in the Amateur world. Why buy a decent built rig from Japan, when the support just isn’t there. Might as well buy a throwaway.
The Aviation market hasn’t seen those cheap rigs yet. Not enough volume.