I loaded F4HWN 3.3 onto my UV-K5 to have a look. It only has 3 scan lists, and it’s awkward to cycle through them. I found starting the spectrum analyzer to be cumbersome as well, since i couldn’t attach it to a long-press of a button. The single VFO view is pretty nice; it puts lots of nice info on the screen, and it’s big. Ultimately, I went right back to AubsUK for the scan features.
Bug Scanning on Aubs 00.07
I have my UV-K5 and UV-K6 running aubs 00.07 firmware. I added a simplex frequency (446.100MHz) to use as with my local cross-band repeater in position 110. I added the new channel to scan list 1.
Upon powering on the radio, I could scan lists 1 (local repeaters) and 4 (satellites) together. When I press the up arrow to advance off an active channel, the scan would now skip list 1, and go right to 4, and continue to skip list 1. Before I realized it was happening, I thought the day was super quiet.
I dropping the repeater frequency from scan list 1, and the scanning behaved correctly. I tried removing another channel from scan list 1, and reintroducing channel 110 to the list, but that didn’t fix it, so it’s not an issue with the count.
Much of scan list 1 is lower in the channels, so I moved my new repeater frequency from channel 110 to position 30, right after all my other simplex channels. That seems to work fine, so that’s how I’m leaving it.
I may need to try some more things and figure out a reproduction to file a bug on the project:
- Is it something about the frequency of 460.100?
- Or is channel 110 the problem?
- Would another frequency in that spot be a problem?
- Are there other channels that would trigger the issue?
Tape Measure Yagi
There are easy instructions to build your own yagi on Instructables. I had just picked up some hose clamps and had the other necessary pieces: a broken tape measure and some 3/4-inch schedule 40 PVC and connectors; so I was ready to build.
The wiring on mine is held in place by the clamps and banana clip adapter. I always like those for prototyping. As directed, I tuned the antenna by moving radiators in and out and measuring with the NanoVNA.
The antenna is noticeably directional, so I can use it to find directions of signals. The S-meter and dB signal strength numbers on AUBS firmware make it easy to evaluate strength and direction.
I transmitted with it to the K3IR repeater as a test during a net.
Aubs Firmware
I’m trying out the Aubs 00.07 firmware on my Quansheng radios. It’s based on the latest egzumer, and so far has kept up-to-date, and it has its own plugin for Chirp.
It has some really cool features for scanning:
- scan on start, a feature I requested of egzumer, but was denied by egzumer.
- 10 scan lists.
I organized mine as:
- 1 = local repeaters and popular simplex
- 2 = all simplex, Ham and GMRS
- 3 = non-local repeaters and other listening
- 4 = satellites
- press
*
to lockout a frequency from scan. - fast scan like egzumer
- frequency spectrum analyzer, but no memory spectrum analyzer like nunu.
This is my daily driver now on both my radios.
Spectrum Analyzer for Travel
I drove out to West Chester yesterday, but I’ve not bothered looking up and adding repeaters for the area. Instead, I could set the spectrum analyzer on the UV-K6 (or K5) to scan the 145MHz-148MHz, stepping on 5.00kHz, and I had a pretty good picture of any repeaters to hear out there.
Once I heard something, I could pop open RepeaterBook on my phone and see what it was, but it saved me lots of trouble programming anything into the radio ahead of time to not necessarily need it.
Egzumer on UV-K5
I installed a new firmware, egzumer, on my Quansheng UV-K5. The firmware has some handy features:
- It displays name and frequency at once
- It leaves the backlight on all the time at a lower level
Quansheng Firmware Updates
I flashed minor updates to the UV-K5 using Chromium and https://whosmatt.github.io/uvmod/. This got me the following features:
- RSSI meter
- Mic boost
- Better menu strings
- 18mhz-1300mhz for receive
- Backlight on for longer