Elecraft
Amateur radio manufacturer | |
Industry | Amateur radio |
Founded | 1998 |
Headquarters | Aptos, California, U.S. |
Website | Elecraft |
Elecraft, Inc. is an American manufacturer of amateur radio equipment and kits, based in Aptos, California. It was founded in 1998 by Wayne Burdick and Eric Swartz.[1] The company's first product was the K2 transceiver which was first prototyped in October 1997.[2]
The company is most notable for the Elecraft K3 high-performance HF transceiver, a 32-bit DSP based radio covering HF plus the 6-meter VHF band and the 160m MF band, introduced in 2008. The reception of the K3 was overwhelmingly positive, with a comprehensive review in QST stating that "The K3, in any of the available configurations, provides a high performance, modular and expandable transceiver that can fill the needs of almost anyone looking for an HF and 6 meter transceiver for home station or portable use".[3] At the time of its introduction, the K3 received the highest Sherwood Engineering ranking of any amateur radio receiver.[4]
Elecraft's product lineup includes a range of QRP CW transceivers, the K2 and K3 all-mode 100W transceiver, KX3 portable 160m-2m transceiver, linear power amplifiers, two panadapters and a range of accessories including antenna tuners and signal generators.
Many Elecraft products are available both as kits and as ready-built units. All offer expansion options. One K3 option, the K144XV, adds a 10-watt 2m internal transceiver. The KX3 can accommodate a single internal VHF transverter module. The KX3-2M adds the 2M band and the KX3-4M adds 4M band, both with ]2.5-watt output. The 2m module receives 120-165 MHz, and transmits on the 2m ham band. The 4m module covers 65-72 MHz. Sensitivity gradually falls off outside the ham bands, though the 2m module is capable of receiving 162 MHz weather-band stations and 120 MHz airport tower AM.[5]
The KX3 transceiver is a portable software-defined radio (SDR) transceiver with a full-featured knob-and-button interface. Although it is an SDR transceiver, it does not require a computer connection.[6]
The company's well regarded "K-Line" consists of the K3 transceiver, the KPA500 500W power amplifier, the KAT500 automatic antenna tuner, and the P3 panadapter.[7] Also the P3SVGA add-on to the P3 to display the panadapter data on a large screen and the W2 HF/VHF/UHF wattmeter are sometimes considered part of the K-Line. Most recently Elecraft has introduced the "KX-Line" consisting of the KX3 transceiver, the PX3 panadapter, and the KXPA100 100W power amplifier.[8]
Partial list of products
Amateur radio transceivers (HF/MF/VHF)
- K1 (HF transceiver)
- K2 (HF/MF transceiver)
- K3 (HF/MF/6M transceiver)
- KX1 (HF/MF transceiver)
- KX3 (HF/MFVHF transceiver)
Amateur radio remote
- K3/0 Mini
Antenna tuner (HF)
- KAT100 (HF antenna tuner)
- KAT500 (HF antenna tuner)
- T1 (HF antenna tuner)
Linear power amplifiers
Panadapter
- P3 (panadapter)
- PX3 (panadapter)
Transverters (VHF/UHF)
- XV50 (6M VHF transverter)
- KX3-4M (4M VHF transverter)
- XV144 (2M VHF transverter)
- K144XV (2M VHF transverter)
- KX3-2M (2M VHF transverter)
- XV222 (1.25M VHF transverter)
- XV432 (70CM UHF transverter)[9]
Signal source
References
- ↑ Elecraft. "About Elecraft". Retrieved 11 March 2012.
- ↑ Wayne Burdick. "Elecraft History". Retrieved 2014-07-13
- ↑ QST (January 2009). "Elecraft K3/100 HF and 6 Meter Transceiver" (PDF). American Radio Relay League. Retrieved 12 March 2012.
- ↑ Sherwood Engineering Inc. "Receiver Test Data". Retrieved 12 March 2012.
- ↑ "KX3-2M/KX3-4M FAQ". Retrieved 2014-10-18.
- ↑ Thomas Witherspoon. "Review of the Elecraft KX3: World-class Transceiver, Superb Shortwave Receiver".
- ↑ Fred Cady. "K-Line Introduction". Retrieved 2014-06-09.
- ↑ QSO Today. "A conversation with N6KR". Retrieved 2014-10-09.
- ↑ Elecraft "XV Series Transverters". Retrieved 2014-05-30
- ↑ Elecraft "Mini module kits".
External links
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