I have followed the topic of the corrupted SD cards for some time. I don't remember hearing about this back in the earlier days running ver 2 on a Flex 6500. Was this problem introduced in later versions of 2? According to Flex, the problem was supposed to have been fixed in ver 3. But some people are having the SD cards corruption problem on radios running ver 3. The general response was to indicate the SD card must have been partly corrupted before upgrading to ver3. However then, what about people having the problem with newer radios that came with ver 3 installed?

The SD card corruption is a random issue and may not result in a problem with booting the radio for weeks, months or ever for that matter. The corruption mostly occurs at the file system level preventing the firmware from reading or writing to the SD card as part of the normal operation of the radio. The incidence of an actual SD card itself being corrupted to the point of being unusable is low.


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Three month old 6400M delivered with v3 software, service desk diagnosed probable SD card corruption last week. I run simple antennas (dipoles/OCFD etc), no RF in the shack, remote ATU so low SWR on the feedline, I am in the habit of keeping the radio on 24/7. have a small number of profiles and don't change them often, the 6400M replaced my 6300 which never had any issues but was running v2.

Replaced the SD with the one sent by Flex and everything is working fine again. The radio came with an older V3 firmware, so it makes sense the corruption was already there. I'm confident it will not happen again. If it happens, I'm sure Flex will take care of the issue as they perfectly did already.

Thanks for the comments Tim, I await to see if the new SD card fixes my problem, as stated the radio is three months old and came with 3.1.12 loaded, of course I have no knowledge if the radio had other earlier versions loaded during production etc.

FWIW, I have a 6 year old 6700 and operate 100% remotely. I do not leave the radio running continuously because of Solar Power limitations. Power to the radio is switched on first and then followed by a short being applied to to the rear RCA connector to boot up the radio. The radio is always turned off in the reverse order with a minimum 15 second delay between opening the short of the remote boot connector and disconnecting power to the radio. I have never had any problem with the radio since day one, other than self inflicted finger trouble.

I have had a 6600M since about the beginning. Every now and again, the radio would disconnect or reboot. The disconnections were solved by using a different network switch, the reboots I put down to software defects causing occasional O/S issues.

Remote switch. I turn off the radio every evening and back on most days in the morning. Once the radio is off, I wait a minute or more, then turn off the RS-70M supply. Power supply on before turning on radio.

Brett, this is an interesting set of questions, but probably not related to SD Card corruption. If the card was physically corrupt or damaged, this might lead to a solution. In the Flex case, I believe it to be software induced data corruption (e.g. SPI clock frequency, write speed, etc ect), not SD Card damage so that is why new versions of the software fix the issue. The new card just makes sure that a pristine version goes back into the radio. Maybe someone from Flex could either validate this or correct me if I have mis-stated the issue.

With SmartLink and a FLEX-6400 you can operate your radio from almost anywhere! Just take an iPhone, iPad, Laptop, or Maestro with you and instantly connect to your radio using an Internet connection.

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I know I am biased, but our radios do get glowing audio reports. I was even surprised this morning when I was using SmartSDR for iOS to my remote 6600 that someone on 80M said it was my best audio ever. Go figure. :)

You may want to consider how the audio gets from the Microphone to the radio. You can't really compare the IC-7300 operation to a Flex-6000 series being used remotely other than you might be using the same antenna.

If you don't have a Dummy load, then try transmitting at 1 or 2 watts while using the radio in Full Duplex mode. Put on some headphones and listen to yourself and use only connections from the back of the radio.

I assume that one sets the Reception to DAX audio RX 1. The question is what do I set the Transmission to? There is a DAX audio TX. I was wondering if that was the right choice or not. Is there any flexradio documents that explain how to setup MMTTY to the Flex 6000 Series of radio's? Or, perhaps are there any video's on Youtube that would describe how to do this?

FlexRadio from Austin, TX (USA) is a company that has been developing and selling SDR-based (Software Defined Radio) radios since 2003. The basis was initially the open source 'PowerSDR' concept, which was developed by the world's leading radio amateurs. Based on this, the hardware platform as well as the software was further developed and today forms the product range of one of the leading manufacturers for this class of radios. In addition to the excellent RF characteristics, the simple commissioning and setup of the radios plays an important role in the development. In keeping with FlexRadio's slogan: SDR - beautifully simple.

4O3A Signature, a member of the Sky Sat Group is a representative for FlexRadio in non-EU countries. We are selling all FlexRadio HAM products and will soon provide full service support. Orders can be shipped directly, or picked up in our office in Montenegro. Factory prices, same as in FlexRadio factory in Austin. Shipping and VAT are not included. For orders including our devices, like Station Genius, we can preconfigure them before shipping. These are just some of the products, we sell everything you can find on www.flexradio.com, at the same prices.

"Under RF Profiles, existing profiles can be modified or new profiles can be created. Then the profile can be edited under the Flex radio selection for MR57. Using the drop-down menu, the 6 GHz band can be chosen for that particular RF profile to support the tri-band operation for MR57"

I have a set of radio buttons that I want to display in a grid like layout inside of a flex container, but for some reason I can't get the flex element to wrap like all others do. This is kind of what I want them to look like (each X is a button, = is empty space)

Paul keeps getting the run-around and evasive answers from their official repair center. And the last time Paul called Flex, the repair technician asked him "What happened, did this radio get struck by lightning?!" But nothing of the sort happened. Paul unplugs the antenna, etc. whenever he leaves the house. And what is more, he was in QSO with me and the local SW MO group here on 3813 when it quit. The sky was clear, no lighting. His audio became distorted and then it ceased to function at all.

I had the same issue with this project!

What I did was I added div tags to contain each input and label elements. I added a same class to all of the divs and flex them with css. (display: flex; flex-direction: row; )

When using some other radios like above, each will have its own com port (per the PC not virtual) memories as well as audio in and out. Make sure you give the audio ports also unique names you are not transmitting on the wrong WSJT-X. You can use a combination of the above. It is easy to mix them up if you are not paying attention to the initial setup. I know...I have done this. oops! This is not as hard to do with the FlexRadio as they already have unique names, but most other units do not.

FORT WAYNE, Ind., Sep. 4, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Raytheon (NYSE: RTN) will develop and qualify a high-frequency radio under a $36 million Project Agreement through an Other Transaction Agreement with Consortium Management Group. The OTA is on behalf of Consortium for Command, Control and Communications in Cyberspace, in support of requirements from the U.S. Air Force Life Cycle Management Center.

"High-frequency radios provide the military with secure communications in an increasingly complex and congested threat environment," said Barbara Borgonovi, vice president of Integrated Communication Systems. "Raytheon's partnership with FlexRadio combines commercial innovation with advanced military hardening techniques to rapidly deliver a next-generation operational capability that supports strategic and tactical missions."

"Worldwide high-frequency communications is what our commercial customers do every day using virtually every mode of operation and type of propagation," said Gerald Youngblood, CEO of FlexRadio. "Our partnership brings together the vast resources and experience of Raytheon in airborne tactical communications systems with FlexRadio's commercial off-the-shelf high-frequency Software Defined Radios to deliver a modular, extensible, and flexible communications platform for the warfighter."

About FlexRadio 

FlexRadio Systems is a leader in technologically advanced software defined radio systems for the consumer, commercial and government markets. Founded in 2003, FlexRadio has customers in more than 30 countries with a wide range of products spanning consumer HF radio systems, government geolocation sensors and signals intelligence platforms. FlexRadio Systems is headquartered in Austin, Texas. For more information, please visit www.flexradio.com.

We use earpieces to enhance our ability to hear radio traffic because our environment is often extremely loud. N-Ear is on the forefront of this technology. (See our discussion of the original 360 here.) Now, the really cool thing is that N-Ear now offers an upgraded 360 Flex. N-Ear sent me an original 360, a 360 Flex mono and a 360 Flex double mono to test. e24fc04721

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