928bolo,
You're just the person I want to talk to! I often hear a lot about the good or neat stuff with the Flex-3000. What are the things you don't like? What other rigs do you have or have used and how does the Flex receiver stack up? Do you use any other digital modes (PSK-31, SSTV, etc.)? Would you buy the radio again? Do you use it with an amp? How good is Flex's tech support?
I guess I have a bunch of questions, so it's nice to have someone on board that has one of these rigs
moleculo,
The list of "don't likes" is pretty short.
- The internal antenna tuner is practically useless. It will only match a 3:1 SWR or less. Unless you are using resonant antennas that are just a little narrow banded you will need to use an external turner.
- The exhaust fan is a little loud.
- The relays are loud.
- The coax connection is BNC only (Flex supplies the adapter)
- PowerSDR is flawless on Windows XP. I doesn't like Vista64 too much but does work.
- If you use a laptop you will likely need to add a fire-wire card and that may cause some some latency issues with PowerSDR. Mine stutters with PowerSDR but that may be a Vista64 issue. In the shack I use an inexpensive home brew desktop running Windows XP that works great.
For items 1-4, I think Flex had to make these compromises to keep the cabinet size small. The internal tuner bothers me the most.
I also own a Ten-Tec Jupiter. I belong to a radio club that has a club station and I have had the opportunity to compare my Flex-3000 side by side with other member's radios. The list includes an Yaesu FT-1000D (a little old but a great radio), Icom 746, Icom 756 Pro-III and a Ten-Tec Omni VII. I think the Flex-3000 is a better receiver than the Jupiter, 1000D, and the 746. I think Pro-III, Omni and Flex-3000 are similar.
Digital modes are my favorite. Particularly PSK31 and RTTY. Nice thing about the Flex and PowerSDR is that you only have one cable running from the Flex box to the computer. Since the Flex box is sending digital audio to your computer you use "Virtual Audio Cables". These are software connections from PowerSDR to your digital program of choice. I like DM780 for PSK (part of Ham Radio Deluxe) and MMTTY (for RTTY contesting using N1MM)
I would buy this radio again, and I may sell my Jupiter to help fund a Flex-5000 (I like the second receiver and 2 meter options).
I do not use an amp.
Fortunately I needed to contact tech support once (computer related). You will be routed to Dudley and he will spend all the time you need to solve your problem. If you do have a problem I'll bet that it will be computer related and not a Flex problem.
I am a new ham (just over a year) with my Extra ticket. I started contesting this summer. Running low power and wires, I'm no "Big Gun" but enjoy it all the same. The Flex makes finding and filtering signals so much easier than the Jupiter. For CW contests the narrow filtering and the automated "zero beat" make working a contact so much easier. By using the "Waterfall" display for digital/CW or "Panafall" for phone you can almost visually determine which signal is "running" a frequency. If a station is running split (transmitting on one frequency and listening on another) you can set up PowerSDR to listen to both frequencies at the same time. If you are using headphones you can put one frequency in your left ear and one in your right (you can even swap them, and adjust the volume independently for each). You can also watch both frequencies on the screen and filter them independently. Contesting with this rig is lots of fun.
If you are interested, there is a map on my website that shows some of the stations I have worked with this radio @ 100 Watts, and a 160-10 multiband dipole up about 60 feet.
http://www.k3gmt.net
If your price point is $1,600 I don't think that you can buy a better radio for the money.
Dave
K3GMT