That's nice, and some contesters are finding the latest and greatest Flex radios a good choice. I think it's reasonable to note that Flex didn't really have a serious contester's radio until they had user-friendly software and the Maestro box. The latter started shipping this year. In my view, I'd say that the Flex 6700 didn't become a serious contesting platform until then. (Not counting beta software and hardware).

Also, I'd bet that the Flex 6700 is not a viable option in a multi-transmitter station (or around broadcast transmitters, or with one or more close-in ham neighbors) without serious bandpass filters in front of it. Bandpass filters commonly used for SO2R and in multi-transmitter contesting stations can fulfill that function. BUT -- those filters are NOT going to be sufficient when the strong signals are in-band -- for example, 40M in EU and AS, and on 20M, where high power broadcast stations are just outside 20M, but still within the passband of most practical bandpass filters. Or in a big multi-multi with a run station and a multiplier station on the same band.

If I'm not mistaken, the original K3 first shipped in 2008, and was updated to a K3S in 2015. K3 owners could get about 90% of that update by spending about $800 on user-replaceable boards (figuring two synthesizers for a K3 with a Sub-RX, the new preamp, and the new I/O board). If you weren't happy with the performance of your earlier Flex radio, it cost the full price of the new radio to upgrade.

If the big Flex radio seems like a better choice, go for it! I'm pretty happy with the integration of my updated K3s with my computers and logging software (and I was happy before the update). The LAST thing I want is my rotators spinning every time I put a new call in the N1MM Plus entry window -- if he heard me well enough to call me, or if I hear him well enough to call him, I can usually work him with the rotator just where it is. I want that to be my decision, not the computer's!

73, Jim K9YC

On Mon,9/5/2016 1:46 PM, Peter W2IRT wrote:
Insofar as I'm personally concerned, I want a radio that has the best
receiver and filtering money can buy, the ability to receive on multiple
bands simultaneously, see a graphic representation of not just every signal
on the band but their calls as well, full integration to my logging software
and rotator, the ability to easily send any mode natively (CW, SSB+voice
keying, RTTY, JT-65/JT-9 and anything else for that matter) and a way to
one-click tune, call and log. To be able to do this with only a couple of
cables and not a rat's nest of wiring is a huge bonus, as is SO2R in one
box.


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