View Full Version : Microair M760
Keith Morgan
July 23rd 08, 11:11 PM
Hi All
Our radio is dead :(
For reasons of budget we are looking at the Microair M760. We would
appreciate any comments that users have concerning this product. Usually
those who have no problems tend not to say anything, so please chip in if
you have had a positive experience. In particular we are interested in the
P version which, I believe, has addessed some reliability issues.
Thanks in advance,
Keith
Henryk Birecki
July 24th 08, 01:25 AM
I have one of these. Had it for about 10 years. It went to back
Australia the first or second year for a preventive replacement of a
capacitor "factory recall". I am very happy with it. The human
interface takes getting used to, but no more than any other radio. The
only problem I have, is that I have a transponder that eats batteries.
As voltage drops below about 11V (11.5V?) transmission starts getting
garbled (you can still receive very well for a while). I heard
comments from Becker and other radio users that the same happens to
them.
Cheers,
Henryk
Keith Morgan > wrote:
>Hi All
>
>Our radio is dead :(
>
>For reasons of budget we are looking at the Microair M760. We would
>appreciate any comments that users have concerning this product. Usually
>those who have no problems tend not to say anything, so please chip in if
>you have had a positive experience. In particular we are interested in the
>P version which, I believe, has addessed some reliability issues.
>
>Thanks in advance,
>
>Keith
Bill Daniels
July 24th 08, 04:37 AM
Yep, what Henryk said. Nice, reasonably priced radio but it likes voltage -
goes wonky below about 11.5V. Use heavy gage power wires and fresh battery.
Bill D
"Henryk Birecki" > wrote in message
...
>I have one of these. Had it for about 10 years. It went to back
> Australia the first or second year for a preventive replacement of a
> capacitor "factory recall". I am very happy with it. The human
> interface takes getting used to, but no more than any other radio. The
> only problem I have, is that I have a transponder that eats batteries.
> As voltage drops below about 11V (11.5V?) transmission starts getting
> garbled (you can still receive very well for a while). I heard
> comments from Becker and other radio users that the same happens to
> them.
>
> Cheers,
> Henryk
>
> Keith Morgan > wrote:
>
>>Hi All
>>
>>Our radio is dead :(
>>
>>For reasons of budget we are looking at the Microair M760. We would
>>appreciate any comments that users have concerning this product. Usually
>>those who have no problems tend not to say anything, so please chip in if
>>you have had a positive experience. In particular we are interested in the
>>P version which, I believe, has addessed some reliability issues.
>>
>>Thanks in advance,
>>
>>Keith
>
Keith Morgan[_2_]
July 26th 08, 01:26 PM
Thanks to those who have helped
Keith
At 03:37 24 July 2008, Bill Daniels wrote:
>Yep, what Henryk said. Nice, reasonably priced radio but it likes
voltage
>-
>goes wonky below about 11.5V. Use heavy gage power wires and fresh
>battery.
>
>Bill D
>
>"Henryk Birecki" wrote in message
...
>>I have one of these. Had it for about 10 years. It went to back
>> Australia the first or second year for a preventive replacement of a
>> capacitor "factory recall". I am very happy with it. The human
>> interface takes getting used to, but no more than any other radio. The
>> only problem I have, is that I have a transponder that eats batteries.
>> As voltage drops below about 11V (11.5V?) transmission starts getting
>> garbled (you can still receive very well for a while). I heard
>> comments from Becker and other radio users that the same happens to
>> them.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Henryk
>>
>> Keith Morgan wrote:
>>
>>>Hi All
>>>
>>>Our radio is dead :(
>>>
>>>For reasons of budget we are looking at the Microair M760. We would
>>>appreciate any comments that users have concerning this product.
Usually
>>>those who have no problems tend not to say anything, so please chip in
>if
>>>you have had a positive experience. In particular we are interested in
>the
>>>P version which, I believe, has addessed some reliability issues.
>>>
>>>Thanks in advance,
>>>
>>>Keith
>>
>
>
>
Andy[_1_]
July 27th 08, 03:01 AM
On Jul 23, 3:11*pm, Keith Morgan
> wrote:
>
> For reasons of budget we are looking at the Microair M760. We would
> appreciate any comments that users have concerning this product.
I've been using one for about 5 years. I general it's a good radio
and I particularly like the variable threshold squelch as it can be
used to shut out the chatterers and still receive safety calls from
close aircraft.
I had one significant problem with it a few years ago. It basically
lost its brain. It was scanning the whole com band but still
displaying only one frequency. That was cured by reseating the
microcontroller as suggested by a Microaire service bulletin.
Everything in the radio is controlled by a single Microchip controller
and some models had problems with poor contact between the chip and
the sockets pins. I did the work myself.
I find some other glider transmissions completely inintelligible. I
suspect that that the Microaire has a narrower than normal IF passband
and is sensitive to off nominal frequency transmitters . Was never
able to prove that but never had a problem receiving any ATIS, AWOS,
Tower, or Center broadcast.
Andy
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