Eben,

I have not tried it, but I suspect that is normal with a receiver tuned to the same frequency and its antenna close to the KX3. The KX3 is an SDR which means that it is using an internal oscillator tuned to the signal frequency. That internal oscillator could be heard by a nearby receiver.

If you want to hear your own signal, work the KX3 into a dummy load at some medium power level and place the antenna for your monitoring receiver in whatever proximity to the dummy load that will give you an S-9 signal on that receiver - do not overdrive the receiver, or it may make 'funny noises'.

Keep trying to make contacts. At this point in the sunspot cycle, propagation is poor on the higher frequency ham bands and 80 or 160 meters are normally not very good for daytime contacts. Try 40 meters during the day and early evening, and 80 meters after dark.

73,
Don W3FPR

On 7/21/2017 4:47 PM, Eben Bruyns wrote:
I'm a new ham and this is my first radio...

So far I've managed to make contact on 80m but it leaves a lot to be desired.

While messing around I tuned a portable receiver to the same frequency
as the kx3. I had the kx3 power set to 0 watts and keyed the mic. The
receiver produced qrm every time I did this.
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