I just bought a 4300-300 . When I plugged it in and started talking on low, (50) watts it was okay. As I turned the power up it started to oscilat and squeal. I was going to call the guy I bought it from but I check the mic and screwed on tight. The noise went away. I have it set keying about 90 and swinging to 250. Is that about correct for the 4300-300? Maybe this weekend I can put it in the truckI have a 4300 300 and it works great for about 15 to 30 mins after that every time I key up it has a static sound in the background almost like a wind noise you can still hear me on it but it sounds bad
First of all, welcome to the forum!I just bought a 4300-300 . When I plugged it in and started talking on low, (50) watts it was okay. As I turned the power up it started to oscilat and squeal. I was going to call the guy I bought it from but I check the mic and screwed on tight. The noise went away. I have it set keying about 90 and swinging to 250. Is that about correct for the 4300-300? Maybe this weekend I can put it in the truck
Yes sir will do. I just finished install. New browning antenna and super mini 8. I ran 4 gage fused power cables with Anderson connectors. Grounded the system. I just powered the unit on and checked swr = 1.5 receive sounds nice and clean. Don't know anyone close to here, but I will try talking skip eventually. Thanks for the adviceBe VERY sure the antenna's SWR is low first. That radio won't tolerate much SWR. I also suggest wiggling the coax back and forth behind each connector while watching the reflected side of the SWR meter. Things come loose on a motor vehicle, and you want to stay ahead of this kind of fault. Much cheaper than having a high-power radio find it for you by blowing up when you key the mike.
73