Yaesu is great. I have had one for years.
Stay as far away as possible from Sporty's. Build quality is terrible. I know at least four people that have had theirs just stop working. One let the smoke out, which is kind of terrifying for an aviation product.
I had an icon but sold it. It was just to complicated for me.
I have a Yaesu Pro-X, which is a great radio (with VOR/LOC nav built in as well). You can use it with its own built-in rechargeable battery or alkaline batteries, and it comes with a headset adapter at no extra charge.Looking at getting a new handheld transceiver. I'm trying to decide if I should go for the Icom A-16, Yaesu FTA-550, or Sporty's PJ2.
Anyone have any experience with any of these?
Thanks.
I have a Yaesu Pro-X, which is a great radio (with VOR/LOC nav built in as well). You can use it with its own built-in rechargeable battery or alkaline batteries, and it comes with a headset adapter at no extra charge.
The only negative point is that if you want to plug in the headset adapter, you have to unscrew a little plate to do so, which would be an annoyance in an emergency.
Thread drift: Looks like they also covered the Trig TY96 vs Garmin GTR200B. Do you know what they had to say about them?I still have an ancient Sporty's SPA-400. Aviation Consumer just did a review of portable COMs, for those who are interested.
I have the iCom A-25N. It has some pluses like the screen and NAV that works, and it's nice and useful to have a ground radio.
The A-16 has nice specs and good price but I wouldn't recommend an iCom based on the difficulty of programming the A-25N, unless don't care about that. The iPhone app for it is totally useless and abandonware. And must buy special cables and software to program it (none of that is really documented), or else do it manually.
The rechargeable battery (a $125 replacement item) gave up in less than 2 years. I think to just use the AA battery tray from now on. I always carry lots of AA batteries in the airplane. Maybe it's because I didn't use it enough that the battery went dead. I definitely agree with above comments about AA batteries.
negative, ghost rider. cuz it won't power up when you need it. mine stopped working at month #13, just outta warranty, after less than an hours' use in totalGeneral question for all of you, are any of these radios loud enough to use in a, say, C172 cockpit in flight without connecting to a headset in an emergency?
I also have a Vertex with alkaline battery tray. I installed Eneloop batteries (the cheaper ones from Ikea), and charge them up once or twice a year.I have a Vertex Standard VXA-300 picked up cheap off of Craigslist. I've never used it in anger, though. I doubt the NiCD/NiMH/whatever batteries have any life left in them, but I do have the alkaline battery tray as a standby and it's full of Energizer Lithium.
I've had several handhelds and this is a primary complaint of mine. Many new handhelds have so many features, menus and sub-menus that you need a degree in electrical engineering to figure out how to adjust the squelch or manually input a frequency. Old man rant over.I use sportys. I find it the easiest to use, turn it on and punch in a frequency. Or use one from the memory function. I had to use it twice in rentals when radios weren't working.nd
I had an icon but sold it. It was just to complicated for me.
I don't trust Bluetooth in situations where I need to fall back to a portable radio...Everyone mentions the Sportys because no adapters needed. But I noticed that the Yaesu 850 has bluetooth. I wonder if that's even better.