When I was a kid I had a Yaesu FT202 rig. It had 3 crystal controlled channels with space for 3 more crystals for £100. Technology has moved since then! I ordered at Quansheng TG-UV2 dual band 2m/70cm handheld; for £72 delivered to my door it covered all of two bands, was about a third of the size and cost about a third of the price in real terms. That price included a spare battery, USB lead and speaker/microphone.

In performance terms it is excellent. We get good audio reports; it covers all of 2m and 70cm, has 5W output and apparently ~10 hours battery life.

Its user interface is weak: everything has to be done through 16 buttons and a 2 line LCD display. Some menus are obvious, but others never will be. Luckily it has 200 easily accessed memories; these can be programmed from a PC.

 Setting up the PC interface wasn't good, and shouldn't be this difficult. I worked it out by trial and error; the approximate steps were:

  • Install the USB cable software from the supplied CD
  • Connect the USB cable
  • Use control panel to move the new COM port to COM2
  • Download the TG-UV2 software from a website
  • Download an install a "RAR" image extractor program
  • Extract the software to a local directory, then install it
  • Reboot the PC
  • Run the software
  • Select English language from the menu bar
  • Connect the radio
  • finally you can read and write settings

I'm not yet sure how best to use the memories. So far I have a few local repeaters listed, and named by their callsign. It does mean that iput frequency/output frequency/CTCSS frequency are all correctly set, whih is otherwise difficult.

But, for £72 all in... excellent!

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