It's all what you can afford. My choice is Alinco
Various forums list a number of good brands of amateur radios. These include Icom, Kenwood, Yaesu and Alinco. Another brand mentioned is the Chinese Wouxun brand. Manufacturers of popular, reliable amateur transmitting/receiving equipment include Yaesu, Kenwood, Ten-Tec, Icom, Ameritron, Elecraft, Tokyo High Power, Alinco, FlexRadio Systems, Powerwerx, and others. Each brand offers features that are of value to some amateurs but not to others. If there were one brand that most amateurs agreed was the best, you can be sure that none of the others would be around. And you can also be sure that when a manufacturer's products are no longer reliable, or no longer a good value for the price, that manufacturer will be gone from the list in a matter of a month or two.
I believe Yaesu is owned by a conglomerate the named Vertex Standard USA, Inc.
One can find information about the ham radio operator Yaesu on the Yaesu website. Yaesu has been making quality ham radios since 1957. Yaseu offers many different types of radios from stationary to hand held devices.
Yaesu transceivers can be bought online. You can find these transceivers on sites like Amazon, Yaesu dot com or even pilot dot com. You can find them on many of the sites that sell items like these.
Manufacturers date yaesu ft100d
There are many places one might go to purchase a Yaesu brand ham radio. In addition to the official brand website, one might also try purchasing from eBay.
16? Nope, the correct answer is 4
I have owned several 60's and have done a lot of turning on and of with no problems whatsoever.... Roger
easy.......junk it
Ginza is in Tokyo, Japan. Ginza is in the district of Chuo, south of Yaesu, and Kyobyashi, west of Tsukiji, east of Yurakucho, and south of Shinbashi.
The E designates the European version with EU frequency ranges and repeater channels/offsets which differ from the US R version.
You may have the right frequency, but there a couple or three encoding schemes for encoding the squelch control on the radio's receive section. You won't be able to hear any audio until you match the encoding used in the transmitting radio. It's another way of adding some channel privacy to those who have general purpose receivers, and it also helps to keep the airwaves from being cluttered by a lot of radio transmissions, allowing the transmitter/receiver to become selective in what they'll receive. You'll find info in the Yaesu owner's manual on how to set those frequencies and even have the radio do an automatic search to find them. If you don't have a manual, you should be able top go to the Yaesu website and download a copy.