K3 display for contesters

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K3 display for contesters

DOUGLAS ZWIEBEL
Hi Dick and other contesters who might be potential buyers but who are
now concerned by Dick's post:

You said, "but there are many parameters that need to be available
at-a-glance: both VFO frequencies, bandwidth, shift/PBT, RIT/XIT
power, vox, AGC, RF Gain, preamp, notch, NB, receive antenna status,
power, etc. "

Well, I think that I'm a pretty serious contester and completely
disagree (except for the QRG of both VFO's).    I am able to hear the
different characteristics you mention.  Narrow BW sounds a lot
different than wide.  I'll adjust it (not that I do that much) based
on what sounds right; not by looking at a display or "the numbers."
Who cares what those are...it has to sound right.  Same with
shift/pbt.  As for RIT/XIT, for me, the only thing that matters is if
it is ON or OFF.  If I twiddle either, it will be for a specific QSO.
And as soon as I'm done with that Q, I zero it by tapping the clear
button.  If I feel that I need to twiddle it again for another Q, well
then the offset does automatically show up (as I understand it...I
don't have my K3's yet).  Power?  Why do you want to monitor that.
Isn't it "set it and forget it?"  Vox?  Are you turning vox on and off
during a contest?  Why?  Basically, I just do not see why these are
important to you unless it's just a matter of that is what you are
used to now.

You also said, "I can't afford to spend time twiddling knobs to
determine the current state of the transceiver."  I agree!  In fact, I
would say that during a contest, you can't afford to be twiddling
knobs period.  If you are adjusting AGC, Shift, Bandwidth RF gain,
Preamp, Notch, etc during a contest, sounds like DXing more than
contesting to me.  Time spent twiddling knobs is time not making Q's.

I won't dispute that these may be (seem?) "important" to you now, but
I know tons of contesters who simply "do it by ear" and usually don't
twiddle knobs at all.  Like K3ZO, on cw I like to select one BW
(usually fairly wide) and that's how I operate the entire contest.  If
I have to narrow it for one situation, I immediately "put it back" as
soon as that Q is done.

So that's MY style of contesting.  The purpose of this post is simply
to present another POV (mine).

de Doug KR2Q
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Re: K3 display for contesters

Simon (HB9DRV)
FWIW I am 99.9% sure that all these values will be available via the CAT
interface sooner or later.

Simon Brown, HB9DRV

----- Original Message -----
From: "DOUGLAS ZWIEBEL" <[hidden email]>


> Hi Dick and other contesters who might be potential buyers but who are
> now concerned by Dick's post:

[chop]

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Re: K3 display for contesters

ac0h
In reply to this post by DOUGLAS ZWIEBEL
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1

Ditto that Doug,

When I'm contesting with my K2 the only knob that gets "twiddled" is the
VFO with an occasional push of XFIL. I can't imagine a big gun station
holding sway on 20 meters moving anything on the rig. They sure don't
have to S+P like we little pistols do.

I've also noticed a disturbing trend on the reflector. That being most
of the negative posts, what few there have been, and none from actual
owners or buyers of the K3, have come from people well known on the
Ten-Tec list and are Orion owners/users.

Kinda makes you go "Hummmm".
Maybe the boys in Sevierville are getting a little nervous.


> You also said, "I can't afford to spend time twiddling knobs to
> determine the current state of the transceiver."  I agree!  In fact, I
> would say that during a contest, you can't afford to be twiddling
> knobs period.  If you are adjusting AGC, Shift, Bandwidth RF gain,
> Preamp, Notch, etc during a contest, sounds like DXing more than
> contesting to me.  Time spent twiddling knobs is time not making Q's.
>
> I won't dispute that these may be (seem?) "important" to you now, but
> I know tons of contesters who simply "do it by ear" and usually don't
> twiddle knobs at all.  Like K3ZO, on cw I like to select one BW
> (usually fairly wide) and that's how I operate the entire contest.  If
> I have to narrow it for one situation, I immediately "put it back" as
> soon as that Q is done.
>
> So that's MY style of contesting.  The purpose of this post is simply
> to present another POV (mine).


 de Doug KR2Q

- --
R. Kevin Stover, ACØH
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Re: K3 display for contesters

w1jp
In reply to this post by Simon (HB9DRV)
Not in this venue-- maybe on the yahoo group perhaps, we should start a
discussion of what a K3 HUD (head's up display) might look like. I am sure
there are a bunch of us that could contribute "gadgets" if we could come up
with an architecture to support it (e.g., Adobe AIR, Flex, Flash, Java,
JSR-168, etc. all of which supported on linux, win, and osx).

With a browser-based portal, one could easily design a portal that would
allow people to do define a 'gadget' layout that would display whatever
information you wanted from the K3 (via K3's data comm).

$0.02,
Jon
w1jp


----- Original Message -----
From: "Simon Brown (HB9DRV)" <[hidden email]>
To: <[hidden email]>
Sent: Saturday, December 01, 2007 08:49
Subject: Re: [Elecraft] K3 display for contesters


> FWIW I am 99.9% sure that all these values will be available via the CAT
> interface sooner or later.
>
> Simon Brown, HB9DRV
>
<snip/>


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Re: K3 display for contesters

Dick Green WC1M
In reply to this post by DOUGLAS ZWIEBEL
Ah. I see we've both presented our operating preferences as if they reflect
those of the majority of contesters. Sorry for that.

 

There have been posts from both sides of the fence. Some ops apparently can
memorize or hear the radio's settings, and other cannot or don't want to.
Thanks to N1EU and P49Y for letting me know I'm not the only person out
there who makes mistakes with my radio. One time I switched my FT-1000D RX
ANT on to run the low bands listening to my Beverage in the wee hours of CQ
WW CW, and forgot that it was on the next morning. It sure was frustrating
trying to run 20m with that Beverage! I thought we'd had a solar flare. And
the 1000D has a little green light next to the button that I should have
noticed. Unfortunately, after 18 or 36 hours of contesting, I'm often on the
edge of being able to remember my own name, let alone the radio settings.
For me, the more prominent the display, the better.

 

The Orion does a good enough job with DSP that it isn't easy to distinguish
between 600Hz, 400Hz, or 200Hz. Sometimes I narrow the passband temporarily
to block QRM or enhance a very weak signal. Other times I shift the passband
to attenuate interference. Other times I twiddle the RIT because a station
is calling me at the edge of the passband. I can't tell just by listening
that these changes have been made (and I challenge anyone to be able to tell
that RIT has been used just by listening.) Sure, most of the time I
immediately reset to zero. In fact, Writelog zeros RIT for me when I log
each QSO. But I run SO2R and sometimes I get distracted by something
happening on the other radio. By the time I get back to the first radio, I
may have forgotten the adjustments I made a couple of minutes ago.

 

I'd appreciate it if you didn't preach to me about contesting style. I
believe my scores and standings over the past 10 years speak to that issue.
I don't adjust my radio excessively during contests. I may do it a few times
every few hours under extreme conditions. That's hardly DXing. Even if done
infrequently, a change here or there may not be the right setting for
working the next QSO, and a valuable mult may be missed because the settings
are off. SO2R contesting is very demanding of the operator's attention, and
I don't want to spend any time figuring out that I shifted the passband,
tweaked the AGC, inserted the notch, etc. I want to see the status of the
radio at a glance, either with a light, a knob position, or a field on the
display.

 

It's important to remember that SDRs are relatively new on the ham radio
scene and designers are still trying to get it right. In the old days, many
settings could be determined by the position of a knob or switch, or perhaps
a small LED. The trend today is to use multi-function buttons, knobs with
digital encoders, knobs with built-in push buttons, etc. In many cases, the
knobs and buttons don't tell you the state of that particular function. This
places greater demands on the display to show the current state of the
radio.

 

I don't particularly like the Orion's LCD screen, but it's large and capable
of displaying any parameters determined by the firmware. If the K3 has a
weakness, it's the limited size display. It's going to take some creativity
for that display to accommodate the operating needs of a wide variety of
users. My comments were posted to help facilitate that.

 

73, Dick WC1M

 

> Message: 16

> Date: Sat, 1 Dec 2007 08:28:03 -0500

> From: "DOUGLAS ZWIEBEL" <[hidden email]>

> Subject: [Elecraft] K3 display for contesters

> To: [hidden email]

> Message-ID:

>       <[hidden email]>

> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

>

> Hi Dick and other contesters who might be potential buyers but who are

> now concerned by Dick's post:

>

> You said, "but there are many parameters that need to be available

> at-a-glance: both VFO frequencies, bandwidth, shift/PBT, RIT/XIT

> power, vox, AGC, RF Gain, preamp, notch, NB, receive antenna status,

> power, etc. "

>

> Well, I think that I'm a pretty serious contester and completely

> disagree (except for the QRG of both VFO's).    I am able to hear the

> different characteristics you mention.  Narrow BW sounds a lot

> different than wide.  I'll adjust it (not that I do that much) based

> on what sounds right; not by looking at a display or "the numbers."

> Who cares what those are...it has to sound right.  Same with

> shift/pbt.  As for RIT/XIT, for me, the only thing that matters is if

> it is ON or OFF.  If I twiddle either, it will be for a specific QSO.

> And as soon as I'm done with that Q, I zero it by tapping the clear

> button.  If I feel that I need to twiddle it again for another Q, well

> then the offset does automatically show up (as I understand it...I

> don't have my K3's yet).  Power?  Why do you want to monitor that.

> Isn't it "set it and forget it?"  Vox?  Are you turning vox on and off

> during a contest?  Why?  Basically, I just do not see why these are

> important to you unless it's just a matter of that is what you are

> used to now.

>

> You also said, "I can't afford to spend time twiddling knobs to

> determine the current state of the transceiver."  I agree!  In fact, I

> would say that during a contest, you can't afford to be twiddling

> knobs period.  If you are adjusting AGC, Shift, Bandwidth RF gain,

> Preamp, Notch, etc during a contest, sounds like DXing more than

> contesting to me.  Time spent twiddling knobs is time not making Q's.

>

> I won't dispute that these may be (seem?) "important" to you now, but

> I know tons of contesters who simply "do it by ear" and usually don't

> twiddle knobs at all.  Like K3ZO, on cw I like to select one BW

> (usually fairly wide) and that's how I operate the entire contest.  If

> I have to narrow it for one situation, I immediately "put it back" as

> soon as that Q is done.

>

> So that's MY style of contesting.  The purpose of this post is simply

> to present another POV (mine).

>

> de Doug KR2Q

>

 

 

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Re: K3 display for contesters

Dick Green WC1M
In reply to this post by DOUGLAS ZWIEBEL
Well, speaking as someone with an "almost" big-gun station, and one who has
operated from several of the biggest stations in the Northeast, with some of
the best operators on the planet, and also one who has had the rate meter up
to 350/hr in Barbados, I can tell you that knobs can and do get twiddled
during big runs on 20m. QRM is QRM, regardless of the station size, and lids
don't know how to zero beat regardless of who you are. I've seen top guns
twiddle every knob they can get their hands on to pull a weak mult out of
the mud during a big run. And big guns have to spend considerable time
S&Ping just like the little guys. If you don't tune, you miss many, many
mults. That's what SO2R is all about.

 

I'm offended by your insinuation about my posts. Yes, I'm an Orion owner and
I was an active beta tester of the Orion for years. I worked very hard to
help Ten-Tec track down bugs in the firmware and enhance the radio. The
reason I'm here is that ultimately Ten-Tec let the customer base down by not
fixing glaring faults in the Orion firmware and by ending the beta test
program abruptly. What started out as a revolutionary radio with fabulous
potential ended up as a sad collection of lost opportunities. Why? Because
Ten-Tec didn't listen to its beta testers and its loyal owners. We reported
many, many bugs, design flaws and ergonomic issues with the radio, many of
them fixable, and they ignored us. They also prematurely killed the resale
value of the Orion I by producing the Orion II instead of an upgrade kit for
the original radio.

 

I was delighted to see that the folks at Elecraft seized the opportunity to
take a similar SDR design to the next level. In looking over the specs, and
reading their responses on this reflector, I've seen that they're a whole
different breed from the folks we worked with at Ten-Tec. I won't hesitate
to say that I think the technical abilities are far superior at Elecraft.
I'm a 30-year veteran of the software industry, and I'm very impressed by
Wayne's abilities and even more so by his attitude. That last part is what
really stands out about Elecraft. They seem to be listening very carefully
to the feedback from their customers, and when possible they're moving
quickly and decisively to correct problems and implement enhancements.
That's great service, and should make the K3 and the company a big winner.

 

I voted with my wallet on that issue by ordering a nicely loaded K3
yesterday. So much for non-owners loyal to Ten-Tec.

 

I placed my order despite misgivings that I'd be better off waiting for the
first wave of hardware updates to come out. I came to the conclusion that,
unlike Ten-Tec, Elecraft will keep the customer base well-informed about
updates and will make them available. That's all I really need -- a
manufacturer who is committed to all customers, not just the new ones (heck,
you can't even get an alignment manual from Ten-Tec.)

 

Let me caution the members of this reflector about something. You don't want
this valuable forum to degenerate into a manufacturer love-fest like the
Orion reflector. At times it's been difficult to raise legitimate criticisms
of the Orion without getting flamed from all sides by Ten-Tec loyalists,
many of whom have limited technical knowledge and experience. My comments
are not meant to be negative. It's very important to point out potential
errors, design flaws and usability problems in an open and honest way.
That's the only way that Elecraft can get the precious feedback they need to
establish product leadership. We should not be shy about criticizing some
aspect of the implementation if we think it's wrong. We won't be right all
the time, but that's also a valuable function of this forum: the ability of
users to debate each other on the merits of some design issue or suggestion.
That process can be a little messy, and sometimes the back-and-forth can get
testy, but like democracy the result is preferable to the alternative:
keeping everyone in the dark and being afraid to speak one's mind. Sometimes
I think people on this reflector are afraid to challenge Elecraft. My sense
so far is that Elecraft welcomes it because they're darned good engineers,
don't have a lot of ego, and are committed to making the best product they
can.

 

That's the kind of company and product I want to invest in.

 

73, Dick WC1M

 

 

> Message: 31

> Date: Sat, 01 Dec 2007 09:54:07 -0600

> From: "R. Kevin Stover" <[hidden email]>

> Subject: Re: [Elecraft] K3 display for contesters

> To: DOUGLAS ZWIEBEL <[hidden email]>

> Cc: [hidden email]

> Message-ID: <[hidden email]>

> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1

>

> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----

> Hash: SHA1

>

> Ditto that Doug,

>

> When I'm contesting with my K2 the only knob that gets "twiddled" is

> the

> VFO with an occasional push of XFIL. I can't imagine a big gun station

> holding sway on 20 meters moving anything on the rig. They sure don't

> have to S+P like we little pistols do.

>

> I've also noticed a disturbing trend on the reflector. That being most

> of the negative posts, what few there have been, and none from actual

> owners or buyers of the K3, have come from people well known on the

> Ten-Tec list and are Orion owners/users.

>

> Kinda makes you go "Hummmm".

> Maybe the boys in Sevierville are getting a little nervous.

>

>

> > You also said, "I can't afford to spend time twiddling knobs to

> > determine the current state of the transceiver."  I agree!  In fact,

> I

> > would say that during a contest, you can't afford to be twiddling

> > knobs period.  If you are adjusting AGC, Shift, Bandwidth RF gain,

> > Preamp, Notch, etc during a contest, sounds like DXing more than

> > contesting to me.  Time spent twiddling knobs is time not making Q's.

> >

> > I won't dispute that these may be (seem?) "important" to you now, but

> > I know tons of contesters who simply "do it by ear" and usually don't

> > twiddle knobs at all.  Like K3ZO, on cw I like to select one BW

> > (usually fairly wide) and that's how I operate the entire contest.

> If

> > I have to narrow it for one situation, I immediately "put it back" as

> > soon as that Q is done.

> >

> > So that's MY style of contesting.  The purpose of this post is simply

> > to present another POV (mine).

>

>

>  de Doug KR2Q

>

 

 

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