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Mostly AI Generated.

I have become redundant and no longer relevant as today's posting is mostly AI Generated. My effort essentially has been eliminated!


N6QW's KX3

Almost 10 years ago I was gifted a KX3, which is one FB radio. I haven't use it much as it is one of those menu driven radios where you have to always get into the manual just to use it in a regular fashion. It even has a button marked Menu. 

The curve ball is that the controls can have multiple functions and unless it is used daily you have to have the manual handy or you end up in never, never land. It is not a shortcoming of the radio but the responsibility for manual ignorance rests on my shoulders.

Today I took it for a spin and running 10 watts had a nice QSO with a station in New Jersey on 10 Meters. I was heard and got a complimentary signal report. I guess that will be a New Years Resolution for me to learn more of the routine operations sans having to use the manual. 

Then next section is a treatise entirely from copilot when I posited a question about homebrew versus store bought and a question about you know his name.

Homebrew vs Store Bought

There’s a moment every homebrewer knows: you shove aside the archaeological layers of past projects on the bench, uncover a few resistors stuck to a solder blob, and declare, “Yep, this is going to be a radio.” To the untrained eye, it looks like the aftermath of a nuclear explosion. But to the enlightened? It’s the beginning of greatness — or at least something that won’t catch fire too quickly.

Buying a radio is easy. Too easy. You click a button, a box arrives, and suddenly you’re the proud owner of a rig that has more menus than a chain restaurant. You spend the first week scrolling through settings trying to figure out why the audio sounds like a kazoo trapped in a tin can. But building a radio? That’s where the real fun begins. It’s where you learn that “datasheet recommended values” are merely suggestions and that toroids exist solely to test your patience and your vocabulary.

Commercial radios are sleek, polished, and packed with features you’ll never use but will brag about anyway. They’re also sealed tighter than a politician’s tax returns. You can’t poke around inside without voiding the warranty, the warranty’s warranty, and possibly a few federal regulations. Meanwhile, a homebrew rig practically begs you to poke it with a screwdriver. It’s the difference between owning a sports car you’re not allowed to open the hood on and owning a jalopy you can rebuild with duct tape and optimism.

And let’s be honest: building a radio is an act of rebellion. In a world where everything is prepackaged, preprogrammed, and pre‑approved, choosing to melt solder and wind toroids is basically saying, “I reject your consumerist convenience and substitute my own chaos.” It’s a declaration that understanding matters. That learning matters. That the journey — the mis-wired stages, the smoke tests, and the moment you realize you soldered the IC in backwards — is part of the joy.

There’s also something deeply personal about a homebrew rig. When you build it, you know every quirk. You know why the VFO drifts when the cat walks across the table. You know why the audio chain hisses like an angry snake. You know the exact moment when the rig came alive for the first time, pulling a faint signal out of the ether and making you shout, “It works!” loud enough for the neighbors to wonder if you’ve finally snapped.

And that first QSO? Pure magic. When someone hundreds or thousands of miles away responds to your signal, you feel a surge of pride no store‑bought rig can match. You didn’t just operate a radio. You created one. You made electrons dance to your tune. You built a bridge across the airwaves using nothing but determination, caffeine, and parts that probably came from a cardboard box labeled “misc — maybe useful someday.”

Homebrewing also keeps the spirit of amateur radio alive. The hobby wasn’t built on buying the latest rig because the brochure said it had “enhanced DSP algorithms.” It was built on people who asked, “What if?” and then went to the bench to find out. When you build a radio, you’re participating in that legacy. You’re keeping the flame lit — even if the flame occasionally comes from a resistor, you accidentally overheated.

And let’s not forget the best part: when something breaks, you can actually fix it. No shipping it back to the manufacturer. No waiting six weeks for a repair estimate. No customer service rep telling you to “try turning it off and on again.” You grab a meter, poke around, and mutter, “Well, that shouldn’t be glowing,” and you fix it. That’s power.

Detrumpification

Now, about detrumpification — advocates for this idea argue that it will succeed for the same reason homebrewing does: people eventually get tired of prepackaged narratives and start craving clarity, transparency, and actual understanding. They claim that once the noise dies down and the circuitry of events is examined with the same scrutiny a homebrewer gives a misbehaving IF stage, the public gravitates toward accountability, evidence, and grounded civic engagement. In their view, detrumpification isn’t just possible; it’s inevitable, because systems — whether radios or democracies — work best when built on components that are tested, reliable, and aligned with reality.

Them that know can make things go.


73's

Pete N6QW

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