
I could figure it out even without the excellent manual. We also check shows for spam :).I've given this five stars because even after all these years, it still looks and feels like a contemporary set.
#STANDARD C510A USER MANUAL FREE#
Feel free to record a show about yourself, or your industry, or any other topic we may find interesting. If you can't fit everything you want to say in the comment below then you really should record a response show instead.Īll comments are moderated. Hope this makes isn't too confusing and I still think a blind op could use it fine particularly if you upload a pile of frequencies to it using the open source chirp software. To change to another menu option you could either use the up down keys or use keypad entry which unfortunately only beeps within the menu option however again you can find out what option you are in by pushing menu a 2nd time. You can find out which option is being displayed by pushing the menu button a 2nd time, you would then push exit. When you push the menu button it announces “menu” and shows you on the display which option is selected.


yes most if not all the menus are spoken. Just read your comment above again and realised I hadn't properly answered your question. MrX Comment #3 posted on by MrX Re Re Baofeng UV5R Would imagine make an excellent radio for a blind op and you won't go far wrong at the price, best regards. The VFO A/B is the same but again the same applies. Playing with the radio I notice that not all functions are spoken the band function button for example which changes between VHF and UHF function only beeps but you can go to any frequency directly at any time when in VFO mode which is spoken and you can then just type the frequency in directly. Yes it does indeed talk out of the box and almost all the functions are announced. G4XBF Comment #2 posted on by MrX Re Baofeng UV5R Does it talk out-of-the-box, and are ALL functions and menus spoken? In other words as a blind op would I be able to do everything with the radio that you can?
#STANDARD C510A USER MANUAL MANUAL#
The (Chinese) Radio Documentation Project manual Written by Lennart Lidberg My new handset available from many places this link from Amazon Basic information on my original 10 year old handset.

Youtube Link for those not living in the UK The price of my new piece of equipment was astonishingly cheap I thought though on reflection its cheap price may also be down to it being a more mass produced item than normal amateur radio equipment. A similar piece of equipment cost me around £120 maybe ten years ago and due to inflation you can probably double the cost again. The new piece of equipment that I bought only became so affordable because of the great advances and massive reductions in cost over time. I came up with the altered title “Now the chips are definitely down” to signify that not only have the changes already happened but that it’s also had a massive cost reduction impact as my newly purchased piece of equipment demonstrates. The title for the original documentary was “Now the chips are down”. In this show I describe a thought provoking documentary I stumbled upon from 1977, the documentary is about the the silicon chip and explores the far reaching implications it will have on society. I’d like to start by apologising for the rather fast and excited speaking style of this show particularly towards the end, hope it doesn’t spoil the content too much, it was all done in rather a hurry. Tags: Hardware, Electronics, Amateur Radio, Open Source, Linux. Hosted by MrX on is flagged as Clean and is released under a CC-BY-SA license. Hpr2062 :: Now The Chips Are Definitely Down Show about an interesting documentary I recently came across and new piece of hardware skip to main content Hacker Public Radio Your ideas, projects, opinions - podcasted.
