I have (6) HTs, but I'm getting ready to order a UV-K5, too. They're so cheap, I may buy two. I'm old and got my HAM license in 1989. I bought my first HT a short time later. It was a Kenwood TH-215A. It was 2 meters only, had just 10 memories, and cost $289. The Chinese radios have "disrupted the market," as they say, and I'm fine with that. Maybe they'll have a 4-place electric airplane for $25,000, soon. 😆 Great videos, thanks.
they are cool! hhh Your Kenwood is or was great at the time .... china is producing unregulated radios that are available widely ,but not that great hhhh thanks for watching
@@takeapart i mean to unlock more frequencies and to customize baofeng by connecting it to laptop or pc with special cable. I'am trying to describe it but my english in this way is not good.
I live in Warsaw, Okecie airport, band 130.000000 and I only hear the noise of no voices... is there something wrong with the radio or have I set something wrong?
Yes, the Quansheng on airband is better than the Baofeng. However the signal is still full is sizzle. My $59.00 airband receiver is so much better. I hope that some manufacturer is able to mount an AM chip on the circuit board inside one of these radios for real airband.
@takeapart sure! No problem with that, I would do that too! Was reacting to the gentleman on top! But anyway, quite a achievement of Mr Egzumer what he did with the airband reception, the stock firmware is not impressive to say the least!