"It is, unfortunately, one of the chief characteristics of modern business to be always in a hurry."
A jack of many hobbies and a master of none - spending lots of time on amateur/ham radio, running, and technology.
Thursday, June 20, 2013
Life in the Fast Lane
Labels:
Life
Leixen VV-808: Menus
Between my broken dial, display, and a manual in Chinese - this may not be 100% accurate. I figure it is a start. Corrections, additions, clarifications, and general insults are all welcome.
1 | APO | OFF, 10M, 20M, … , 80M, 90M, 2H, 4H, ... , 14H, 16H |
2 | APRO | |
3 | BC Lock | ON/OFF |
4 | Beep | ON/OFF |
5 | CHASave | |
6 | DTMF | ON/OFF |
7 | DW | ON/OFF |
8 | DecType | |
9 | DecCode | |
10 | EncType | |
11 | EncCode | |
12 | FM | Switch to Broadcast FM |
13 | FM Scan | |
14 | FM SQL | |
15 | FM DW | |
16 | Font | SMALL/BIG |
17 | KeyLock | K+S/PTT/KEY/ALL |
18 | Keypad | ON/OFF |
19 | Lamp | CONT/OFF/KEY |
20 | NameSYS | ON/OFF |
21 | NameCHA | ON/OFF |
22 | NamEdit | |
23 | OpenDIS | User Defined/All/Lease Time/Leixen |
24 | P1 Long | Programmable Key P1 - Long Press |
25 | P1Short | Programmable Key P1 - Short Press |
26 | P2 Long | Programmable Key P2 - Long Press |
27 | P2Short | Programmable Key P2 - Short Press |
28 | P3 Long | Programmable Key P3 - Long Press |
29 | P3Short | Programmable Key P3 - Short Press |
30 | Power | HIGH/LOW |
31 | PTT ID | ON/OFF |
32 | Roger | ON/OFF |
33 | Reverse | |
34 | RPT SET | |
35 | RPTType | |
36 | SaveBat | ON/OFF |
37 | SCAN | Starts scan, Menu button will stop |
38 | SCNMode | TO/CO |
39 | SCANADD | ON/OFF |
40 | SQL | 0-9 |
41 | Step | 2.5KHz |
42 | Tail | ON/OFF |
43 | Talk | |
44 | TOT | OFF, 10, 20, … , 110, 120 (seconds) |
45 | TxStop | ON/OFF |
46 | Vox | ON/OFF |
47 | Vox D | 15, 25, 35, 45 |
48 | Vox S | 0-8 |
49 | VXB | ON/OFF |
50 | WIDNAR | NARROW/WIDE |
Leixen VV-808: More Popping
So it isn't just me and this is a UHF version. Thanks to SA0CEO for sharing the video! Also, I will add that when the radio is scanning, it is almost continuous popping on mine.
Leixen VV-808: Short QSO Sample
Another fancy iPhone video, but for giving you a small taste, I think it works.
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
Funny Thing
If you break the rotary encoder and can only use the keypad on the microphone to cycle through the settings (in an effort to document all the menu options), don't toggle the MENU Item 18 - Keypad to "OFF".
It makes things exciting while you plug the programming cable in and hope you can turn the keypad back on. Good news - it worked.
I'm going to change the my tag line to "Brick O'Lore - breaking radios in more ways than you could ever image."
It makes things exciting while you plug the programming cable in and hope you can turn the keypad back on. Good news - it worked.
I'm going to change the my tag line to "Brick O'Lore - breaking radios in more ways than you could ever image."
Labels:
Ham Radio
409Shop Frequent Flyer Points
It needs to be 10 total - not 10 at once. I'd wear it to ham fests.
409Shop you need to buy 10 radio then you can get the jacket for free (@YouTube youtu.be/73M79uNM1fs?a)
Wed, Jun 19 05:15:17 from Google |
Name: 409Shop
|
Location: Hong Kong
|
Bio: 409 Shop Radio & Accessory Supplier Facebook : http://t.co/rEmDqE9ml6 Youtube : http://t.co/4M9sWA1VDX Weibo http://t.co/xw7uKozlBR
|
Following: 233 Followers: 203 Updates: 1131
|
Labels:
Ham Radio
Bracelet Buddies
Slim got me a gift and now we are bracelet buddies like Joey and Chandler (not this kind)! He made one for my wife, too. All kidding aside, I like it a lot.
Labels:
Tactical
Leixen VV-808: Popping
Still popping.. squelch is all the way up, tried a difference antenna, and operating from a different QTH. The popping volume is independent of the volume setting of the radio. Sorry for the iPhone video - working with what I got - but you can hear the pop at about 6 seconds. I don't see the green light come on like when SQL is broken and I am actually receiving.
Tuesday, June 18, 2013
A Theoretical Question
I have this friend...
Say a couple of guys were looking at taking something apart... because that is what guys do. Just to keep this on topic, let's pretend it was two hams and they were taking apart an inexpensive Chinese mobile radio.
The first guy, who bought the radio, took a few screws out and couldn't easily pull the cover off, so he hands it to the second guy and says, "Can you get this apart?"
The second guy messes with it for a second and then hands back the radio with the cover off. Ta da! Slice of pie, piece of cake!
A little while later, the first guy notices this:
Which leads to this:
And this (sorry - not a great picture, but you get the idea):
So, apparently, it is important to take off the knob first before pulling on the face plate as the plastic that holds the rotary encoder together isn't designed to take much force. Go figure. Oops.
The radio still works - you can use the controls on the microphone. The display is messed up (see image). It is unknown when that happened - during the opening of the case or during subsequent "trouble-shooting." Transmit and receive both seem fine.
The first guy feels like he setup the second guy for failure by just handing him the radio and asking for help. He doesn't think the second guy owes him anything at all.
The second guy feels extremely guilty and wants to pay for the broken radio.
So, theoretically, do you think the second guy owes the first guy anything? I'd like the internet to be the final arbiter in this as we can't keep passing cash back and forth.
Say a couple of guys were looking at taking something apart... because that is what guys do. Just to keep this on topic, let's pretend it was two hams and they were taking apart an inexpensive Chinese mobile radio.
The first guy, who bought the radio, took a few screws out and couldn't easily pull the cover off, so he hands it to the second guy and says, "Can you get this apart?"
The second guy messes with it for a second and then hands back the radio with the cover off. Ta da! Slice of pie, piece of cake!
A little while later, the first guy notices this:
Which leads to this:
And this (sorry - not a great picture, but you get the idea):
So, apparently, it is important to take off the knob first before pulling on the face plate as the plastic that holds the rotary encoder together isn't designed to take much force. Go figure. Oops.
The radio still works - you can use the controls on the microphone. The display is messed up (see image). It is unknown when that happened - during the opening of the case or during subsequent "trouble-shooting." Transmit and receive both seem fine.
The first guy feels like he setup the second guy for failure by just handing him the radio and asking for help. He doesn't think the second guy owes him anything at all.
The second guy feels extremely guilty and wants to pay for the broken radio.
So, theoretically, do you think the second guy owes the first guy anything? I'd like the internet to be the final arbiter in this as we can't keep passing cash back and forth.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)