I had just noticed those lines but didn't think they were necessarily the
transmit freq as I was in CW and the line wasn't at 600 as I would have
expected. Figured it was new for something but did not further research
them at the time. I had my width wide to see the pileup and with it in the
Hi Jim,
We see a lot of similar questions on the reflector. Self experimentation is
probably the best method for you to fully understand the use of the P3 with
respect to VFO B and split operation. Just remember the three cursor colors.
VFO-A is green. VFO-B is magenta. When you are transmitting
Hi Jim,
In answer to your question:
I am new at split. Can I run split using my second receiver for the
transmit freq?? Then narrow the receive width on the transmit
frequency vfo so the line would be where it belongs???
Thanks, 73, Jim KG0KP
Yes. When you are in Split, the VFO B
I use a macro based on ZL2IFB's suggestions:
RT0;XT0;FR0;DV0;BW0040;SWT13;SWT13;UP4;SB1;BW0100;MN111;MP002;MN255;
It is assigned to PF1 (RIT button), you can do the job with K3 utils.
It copies the actual frequency to VFO B, moves the VFO 1 UP, sets on the
corresponding filters. Now you
Check the K3 manual there are some good button programs included like up
2 up 5 and cleanup which will take you out of split.
Mike W0MU
On 4/18/2014 8:01 PM, Martin Kratoska wrote:
I use a macro based on ZL2IFB's suggestions:
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