Hillbilly Heaven
Explorer
You got it! That is what I meant.In the FTM-400 only A-side can do Fusion, so you'd presumably want to change APRS to the B-side so that the A-side is left free to do any mode.
You got it! That is what I meant.In the FTM-400 only A-side can do Fusion, so you'd presumably want to change APRS to the B-side so that the A-side is left free to do any mode.
That looks very cool!I am giving serious thought on jumping on one of these portable computers. Runs Win10 and Android 5.1 with the option of 7.1
I know the risk on Indiegogo but have had good luck in the past.
https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/the-world-s-most-powerful-pocket-sized-pc/x/14707986#/
I have thought about this here and there and it occurs to me that it's altogether possible that the Yaesu doesn't let you access the TNC is because...well...maybe there's no "TNC" perse in the radio. There might be some direct encoding of the APRS messages and a modulation stage.The Kenwood 710 does have Kiss mode tnc built in so yes it will allow you to send an APRS message from inside the app.
I've heard that too, it would be a welcome fix for sure. The 400DR's not that bad, it's just that it seems to have similar performance to GPS receivers from over a decade back - slow cold starts on every startup, no persisting of ephemeris. If I have a clear view of the sky, it's fine. But mounted inside a vehicle seems to make it really unhappy.Supposedly the built in GPS receiver in the 400XDR has been upgraded.
Just so everyone understands about sending messages with the Yaesu. You can send messages via the User Interface in the radio but you can not send messages via external apps or control.I like the integration of APRS and generally like Yaesu radios but lacking a full TNC is a disappointment. If you want position beacons, send/recv a few messages and want to feed other stations' positions to display on something, e.g. a typical ExPo use case, they'll do everything you need. It's just becomes limiting not having command line & serial access to tinker more.
The Kenwood gives me full external aprs usage but lacks any additional digital voice modes and most important lacks bluetooth interface.
I think the only part that is really proprietary is DVSI's AMBE voice codec, which is used in most (maybe all?) digital systems. I'm not familiar with the DV4Mini but I assume it's either using those parts or has reversed engineered patented & copyright IP. Everything else is somewhere between open source and freely licensed from JARL, Yaesu, etc. The DMR protocol is an ETSI standard.How does the DV4Mini license their DMR implementation? I just feel like we should be able to homebrew this stuff at this point.
I wish one of the big guys would embrace DMR. I removed my FTM-350 to install a Connect Systems CS-800D (which is V/U analog & DMR but only single receive). To me the ideal radio is a VHF/UHF dual receive, APRS with DMR. Basically if the FTM-400 did DMR rather than Fusion that's what I would have bought. D-Star is fine but I never embraced it and got DMR radios when I did start doing digital because that's what everyone was using around here. It's great if Icom and Kenwood keep offering D-Star and there's plenty of people who use it but as near as I can tell the number of people using Fusion is actually small, so I don't see the point of two amateur-specific digital modes when DMR and P25 exist in the commercial world as an alternative. It just adds more fractures to the mess that already exists.