Thanks, everyone, for all the pragmatic and philosophical observations about 
FT-8. Depending on who you ask, it’s anywhere from miraculous to 
take-it-or-leave-it. Or both. This is characteristic of many aspects of amateur 
radio, of course. To each their own. 

A different sub-noise-floor mode, PSK31, was on my mind this morning. After 
breakfast I grabbed my KX2 and 17/20 meter whip and went outside to check the 
bands. All of the CW signals were weak at the time. Then I happened across a 
warbling PSK31 signal in this mode’s preferred segment (14070-14073)—a VA7 
calling CQ. 

I used the KX2’s auto-spot function, resulting in perfect copy. He came back to 
me on the first call at 10 W, which is not unusual; PSK31 has an established 
track record as a great QRP more. 

The important point is that I was able to carry on a satisfying, non-automated, 
data-mode QSO using a only a hand-held radio with an attached keyer paddle. In 
my sweats. On a gorgeous day right out of a Maxfield Parrish painting. Without 
a computer. 

I was reminded that PSK31 *is* that mystical unicorn: the sub-noise-floor data 
mode that’s also a conversational mode. It isn’t full QSK, like CW, and it 
lacks the rigor of FT-8, but it has some of the advantages of both. This is why 
PSK31 (and PSK63) are built into the K3, K3S, KX3, and KX2. All you need is a 
keyer paddle. If you prefer a keyboard, you can use a terminal emulator 
application running on a variety of devices. Just attach your device to the rig 
using the supplied USB cable. 

To summarize: If you’re a CW op who’s temporarily out of CW  signals, or an 
FT-8 user who longs for a few unmediated QSOs, take a walk on the wild side and 
try PSK. 

Notes:

1.  Elecraft radios have a special mode, “PSK-D”, that treats PSK31/63 as a 
narrowband mode for VFO tuning purposes. You don’t just park the VFO at 14070 
like you do when using a sound card and a computer. Instead, use a very narrow 
filter bandwidth (50 to 100 Hz) and tune around the 3 kHz PSK segment using the 
VFO set to 1-Hz steps. When you find a signal, tap the keyer speed knob, which 
auto-tunes the received signal (this is the “SPT” function). 

2. RTTY mode (FSK-D) is also available. This legacy mode is great fun during 
RTTY contests. Last year at FD, taking a break from CW, I made over a dozen 
RTTY contacts using the KX2, including one of over 2500 miles with the rig 
hand-held + whip. 

73,
Wayne 
N6KR

----
http://www.elecraft.com
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