Elecraft customer support is second to none.  The KX3 is definitely a keeper
- you just don't see these things selling second hand.  That's a pretty good
indicator of customer satisfaction.  In my opinion the KX3 is a brilliant
bit of kit and something you'll never regret purchasing (and will keep
forever).

Peter VK4JD

-----Original Message-----
From: Elecraft [mailto:elecraft-boun...@mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of David
Orman
Sent: Wednesday, 3 December 2014 4:24 PM
To: Wayne Burdick
Cc: Elecraft Reflector; k...@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] Is the KX3 a good choice for a new General?

I am a new ham, licensed this year (general). Wayne obviously has the design
perspective re: KX3 but I wanted to talk about my experience. I'm in IT, and
an engineer, so I research anything I am looking at purchasing quite heavily
prior to purchase. I won't talk about why my research lead me to purchase a
KX3 (and then a KXPA100, and PX3) - but I will talk about what I've found
from using it, and using other people's radios.

1) Intuitive controls, menus, and logic.

I can't state this one strongly enough. After having used friend's Yaesu,
Icom, and even Kenwood radios, the Elecraft just makes sense. It took me
minutes to get up and running with the KX3 and talking with folks SSB, as
well as using digital modes. There were a few things I had to look up in the
manual (when I encountered a station running split, for example) but 90% of
what I've encountered I've been able to figure out without needing to
reference the manual. I can't say the same for the other brand radios I've
used. There's nothing wrong with those other radios, but the Elecraft just
makes sense. I've had friends ask to use my KX3 as they were interested in
it, and the same held true. They were able to perform most operations with
little guidance, because it just makes sense.

2) Receive ability

I've A/B compared my KX3 with a lot of other radios on the same antennas,
and I've yet to find one that outperforms the KX3 - and I've run it against
plenty of non-portable setups. I'm sure some exist, but I haven't
encountered them, and I know of nothing portable that will touch the KX3 in
receive capability. I live in a location with an HOA so my antenna situation
is heavily compromised. Having the ability to pull signals out from noise is
the difference between being on the air and not being on the air. I live
next door to an air force base. I still routinely talk to people all over
the US, Canada, South America, and beyond with a wire antenna that's 5' off
the ground (fence-line loop fed with 450ohm window line). Sure, plenty of
QRM to go around, especially when the AFB kicks off whatever radar/etc that
pollutes 20m/40m/80m/etc - but I can still receive.
I've had 857s over here who were unable to copy conversations, then swapped
to the KX3 and while not ideal, I could get a a 100% copy.

3) Portability

I camp a LOT. I can't speak highly enough about the portability of the KX3.
I have 4 4200mAh LiFE batteries that I rotate through, but I've rarely had
to use more than two on week long trips. I use an EFHW antenna I made tossed
into trees or hung from a crappie fishing pole. Even at maximum power output
on SSB, I get a huge amount of runtime out of the KX3. Only once have I had
to move to the second battery on a week long camping trip, and I was very
active on digital modes for that trip. I haven't done a recent measurement,
but I was ~ 100-150mA draw before I got my PX3 in receive. That's 28 hours
on one of those batteries (they actually are
4200-4500 mAh of capacity when tested, so could probably do an hour or two
more).

4) Quality

These radios are solid. I've added a Side KX to my KX3/PX3 just because they
get chucked into camping backpacks quite often, but these radios are made to
last. Everything fits well, everything has a very solid feel. Parts like the
LCD cover (I think it's termed a screen bezel by Elecraft) are replaceable;
these units were engineered to survive use and even if you manage to goof
up, you can get another one and you're set. Little touches like this don't
seem important until you need them.

5) Customer support

I can not speak highly enough about this. I've called Elecraft for a few
things since I've purchased their radio, and they have been amazingly
helpful. My most recent call was asking about using the PX3 signal generator
as a source for doing the temperature compensation procedure with the KX3
(don't do it!) I've always received extremely helpful advice, and had quite
wonderful conversations. I've learned a lot just from those interactions, as
the people at Elecraft truly do care about the hobby, and want to help out
when they can. I spoke with Elecraft before I was an owner, and the
information I received was not only very helpful and thorough, but it went
far beyond just their product line. It's obvious this is a company that
cares about amateur radio, and wants potential hobbyists to join in. I
probably wouldn't be on the air at this point if it hadn't been for the
helpful people at Elecraft talking to me about the ins/outs, and sharing
their experiences.

I hope that helps in your decision making. There are far more bullet points
that I could add, but I don't want to overwhelm someone seeking to join the
club. In my honest opinion, you'd be hard pressed to find a better route to
go as a new ham. I'm a buy once, cry once kind of person - and the KX3 is a
great way to go. If I'd purchased something else, I'd have upgraded by now
based on my experience with other radios I've been around. I have 0 desire
to move away from my KX3, and I've already had a few friends convert to one.

David/K5DJO

On Tue, Dec 2, 2014 at 6:53 PM, Wayne Burdick <n...@elecraft.com> wrote:

> Interesting thread. The dust appears to be settling, so I thought I'd 
> weigh in. Whether I'm biased or not is left as a study question for 
> the reader ;)
>
> We designed the KX3 specifically for new hams. Here are some
> considerations:
>
> - The KX3's size and weight allows it to be used anywhere, and powered 
> from a small battery or power supply, even its internal battery pack. 
> This means you don't have to evict anyone from precious desk or table 
> real-estate as you dabble in your new hobby. At least not right away. 
> You can move around, maybe use a corner of the garage, or an RV, or a 
> picnic table. This is why we call it "ultraportable."
>
> - The KX3 has about half as many controls as the K3 and other 
> full-featured desktop radios. We kept only the essentials. And you 
> don't need to use all of the rig's features. You can start with the 
> basics -- VFO, AF GAIN, MODE, BAND up and down. The default settings 
> of the radio pretty much just work. Set the power level you want and start
tuning around.
>
> - The owner's manual is written with new hams in mind, with 
> supplemental information about antennas, operating modes, and the 
> nature of the different HF bands. We don't go into a huge amount of 
> detail, but it's enough to get you started, and you already have a few 
> thousand friends on the Elecraft and KX3 reflectors if you want to 
> dive into deeper waters. The manual is organized so that basic 
> operation is covered right up front. As time permits, you can try each
more advanced feature.
>
> - At 12 W (8 to 10 on the highest few bands), the KX3's power output 
> is only 9 dB below 100 W. Thanks to the beauty of logarithmic 
> phenomena, that's only 1.5 to 2.5 S-units depending on whose S-meter 
> standard you're basing it on. (We use roughly a 5-dB-per-S-unit 
> standard at Elecraft.) Yes, it can be harder to work stations using 
> SSB mode when you're two S-units down, but if you avoid pileups and 
> stick with calling stations that are well above the noise level, you'll
have no trouble making SSB contacts.
>
> - The KX3's wide-range ATU can greatly simplify the process of 
> erecting antennas for all bands. Here's the simplest case: One piece 
> of wire about
> 25 feet long, tossed into a tree, and a similar wire laid on the 
> ground, can be connected directly to the radio with a BNC-to-binding 
> post adapter (no coax). The ATU can tune this on 40-6 meters. If the 
> wires are 50 feet long, you can also cover 60 and 80 meters. That's 
> 80-6 meters with two wires, no coax, and a support provided free by nature
(or your neighbors).
> Obviously you can improve on this to better your odds, say by using an 
> off-center-fed wire of 50 to 100 feet long supported in the middle by 
> a 20 to 40 foot pole or tree and fed with twinlead or ladder line. A balun
(e.g.
> Elecraft BL2) would then be used at the rig to convert this 
> sortof-balanced antenna to the radio, through a short length of coax (1 to
2 feet).
>
> - Hams who are transitioning from VHF/UHF to HF might want to add the 
> 2-meter module (3 watts, all modes, including repeater controls, DTMF, 
> memories, etc.). When you get tired of exploring the vast wilds of the 
> HF bands, you can return to the familiarity of 2-m FM, etc., and chat 
> with the locals.
>
> 73,
> Wayne
> N6KR
>
>
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