if you plan to use it with a headset you MUST also use an external antenna, otherwise RF feedback will make it impossible to transmit
Really? You can't just move the antenna a few inches away?
Really. It has to be several feet away from the mike wires at least, on an extension cable.
Really. It has to be several feet away from the mike wires at least, on an extension cable.
I've got three handhelds (one's dead now) and none had the problem you described. An external antenna does improve range dramatically, especially when transmitting.Really. It has to be several feet away from the mike wires at least, on an extension cable.
Maybe on your radio but that is not a universal problem. When I used mine with my headset adapter in flight I had zero problems transmitting and receiving without any extension and HH unit was on my lap so I could hit the Tx button...so there is that.
I can see how that "COULD" be a problem but is is certainly not a "MUST" have an external antenna.
Get one that takes regular batteries and throw an extra set in your flight bag. You will never remember to charge it and Murphy's law (no offese @murphey) states it will die when you need it most.
So there I was… hand helding with Icom hanging from antenna cord coming out of defunct Narco slot. Tested, seemed good…
10 miles out, turn on, get ATIS, check in with tower at 7 miles, report a 3 mile base. Roger…
Key mic at 3 miles, batteries give out… oh gawd.
Trim all out of whack (was ferrying plane to gulf shores to work on it there where I work), I’m pulling radio apart to put in new AA batteries. I’m circling, trying to not crash with my knees, batteries spilling everywhere… I was howling at the mess I’d made of this evolution.
Finally get it all back together, tower is trying get me, “we see ya circling” (plus or minus 500’ starting at 1000 feet), egad.
Get this mess all straightened out, cleared to land, “next left call ground”. Roger.
Let the radio hang from the cord again as I wrestled the next left, radio apparently not well plugged back into antenna, it falls off… here we go again…
The features I want in my next handheld....
basically no features. I want it simple...no programming, no scanning, no memory
just a frequency knob, a volume knob, and a squelch knob
and I like the idea of no headset adapter required, just jacks to plug in a headset.
simple
I have an old Icom radio in my old aviation box. Haven't used it in years, forgot the model. Has a built in VOR receiver. I used to carry it around in my flight bag along with headset adapter and a spare battery tray...but every once in a while I'd pull it out to get atis or whatever on the ramp...and I'd have to pull out the manual to remind myself how to get it into the correct mode. It's just push button keypad as I recall.... that is overcomplicated with shift and function keys for different things. It would be fine if you used it all the time....but for an emergency kit it's a stupid design
PRC-77s still work fine on unencrypted FM, but they can't transmit and receive the aviation bands. And, while they're portable, they're not a "handheld."So basically you want a Prick 77. Oh, actually those can't communicate with modern radios.
PRC-77s still work fine on unencrypted FM, but they can't transmit and receive the aviation bands. And, while they're portable, they're not a "handheld."
I mostly use it for listening to AWOS.
Just curious if you've tried using your cell phone to get the AWOS in flight.
It usually works for me, with a phone connected to headset by Bluetooth. Just look up the airport info on Foreflight, and the phone number is right there. Touch it, and listen to the AWOS, with no static even at a considerable distance.