- #ICOM IC F420 10 PROGRAMMING SOFTWARE SOFTWARE#
- #ICOM IC F420 10 PROGRAMMING SOFTWARE CODE#
- #ICOM IC F420 10 PROGRAMMING SOFTWARE WINDOWS#
Actually, now there are better choices than Icom's RS-232 converter box. To use this program, the reader needs to have at least one Icom radio and an Icom RS-232 converter box (CI-V).
IcomProgrammer is a Ruby script that can program nearly any Icom radio with one or more user-defined frequency tables, including such esoterica as repeater tones and split-frequency modes. I've recently become a Ruby enthusiast, primarily because Ruby development is so fast, and because Ruby programs remain understandable after months or years of neglect, if one chooses reasonable names for things in the first place. You can create any number of frequency tables, and you decide which tables are applied to which radio. You tell IcomProgrammer which radio you want to program, and it fetches the required data tables and programs the selected radio, as fast as possible.
IcomProgrammer is more oriented toward database management than user interface, in fact, it runs on the command line.
#ICOM IC F420 10 PROGRAMMING SOFTWARE WINDOWS#
So I have been working on a better, more universal radio programmer, one that would work with most Icom radios, one that would program specific radios with particular sets of frequencies and modes, and that would run on both Windows and Linux. But RadioComm is more of a user interface than a radio programmer, and worse, it only runs on Windows, something I've more recently come to regard as inexcusable. Then I wrote a more general controller program called RadioComm, which created a sort of virtual control panel for a number of different Icom radios.
#ICOM IC F420 10 PROGRAMMING SOFTWARE CODE#
Later on I created a graphic radio controller for the Icom PCR1000, unfortunately, this radio has a lot of traits not common to other Icom radios, so the code isn't very portable. In an earlier project called EasyTuner I used a spreadsheet to contain the lists and to program the radios. I recently decided to create a way to program all my radios with suitable frequency lists, in a fast, efficient way.
#ICOM IC F420 10 PROGRAMMING SOFTWARE SOFTWARE#
Having only one brand of radio greatly simplifies any software projects one might consider. You cannot imagine the shock of being awakened from a blissful sleep by the feeling of a greasy, cold, wet flying fish against your bare skin, struggling to get away from you by thrashing even further down into your sleeping bag.Įnd of digression. But this unlucky fish hit an open port cover and was deflected down into the cabin, into my sleeping bag, where I lay asleep in a more or less unclothed condition. One night as I lay asleep, sailing along in the tropics under autopilot control, a flying fish flew across the top of my boat's cabin. And there is no safe location for a radio - at some point in a long ocean voyage, salt water will get everywhere.Īnd not just salt water. Given enough time, nature will take care of that for you. In this informal ranking, the Icom score remained relatively high, hence my current prejudice (and that's what it is - a prejudice, the choice of a lazy mind).Ī digression: don't misunderstand - I didn't deliberately splash salt water on my radios, but there's no need to arrange such a stress test while sailing on the open ocean. This may sound rather narrow-minded, but during my solo around-the-world sail, I watched every single piece of electronics give up the ghost at least once, and I began to rank radios by how long they lasted after a gallon of cold salt water was splashed on them. I recently decided there's no point in having any radios apart from Icoms. I haven't been active that entire time, but I've always had a few interesting radios around, home-built in the early days, and increasingly exotic as I matured. I've been a radio amateur for about 50 years (currently KE7ZZ).