I can't argue with the reasoning from either side of the camp here - if I was 
in the US, but I'm not...

I'm in the UK, 30m west of London in the M4 (that’s highway/freeway, think 101) 
corridor with suburbia all around, houses in the 'country' as close or closer 
than those in a NY suburb and VHF/UHF is likely to be of more use in an 
emergency. If I plan to go portable on some trail, that's a good 45 mins to the 
nearest quiet spot, I'd be planning that and taking something like an 4Ah gel 
cell and a tent. If I want to hike up a mountain, that's 2 to 3 hrs to 
something 'not small' and 5 hrs to something equivalent to one of your local 
small mountain ranges (we don't do 'big' here).

I still like the idea of the KX3, I can see uses for it here in both HF and 
VHF, but in my own mind I was thinking 'great 2M rig with fantastic frontend', 
to drive a 100W PA for our 2M contests at my alternative QTH - with mains power 
and a permanent mast. A lot less messing about than disconnecting the K3, XV144 
etc and putting it in the car to go the 2 miles to that location (a Scout HQ on 
higher ground where we have erected a small mast and 2m beam).

I can see running SOTA with it as HF and then, yes;, light, minimal kit, ATU 
etc. would be great, but I don't do SOTA and as I say, for anything worth the 
climb, it's a good 4 to 5 hrs away.

If I want HF, I'll want an ATU as well, so I'll have to remove the 2M - I don't 
think the intention is to plug and play with these on a regular basis.

So to me, although very useful, an internal battery is not an inherent part of 
the rig, but a good 2m module will be. Guess I may end up buying 2!

As Wayne says, each to his own...

73 de M0XDF, K3 #174, P3 #108, KX3 #???
-- 
The trees that are slow to grow bear the best fruit.
-Moliere, actor and playwright (1622-1673)

On 27 Aug 2011, at 06:13, Wayne Burdick wrote:

> To each his own, but....
> 
> Mike Morrow wrote:
> 
>> In the 45 years I've been around ham radio, the probability that any  
>> HF
>> ham rig would be used in an emergency has been vanishingly small, with
>> the highest probabilities having been 45 years ago, not today....
> 
> A few years ago a ham in Oregon broke his leg hiking. He used a KX1 to  
> call rescuers. I'm not kidding.
> 

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