Up for Sale is a 100% Brand New Yaesu FT-60R
Features:
144 / 430 MHz DUAL BAND HANDHELD WITH WIDE BAND RECEPTION
The FT-60R’s small size allows you to take it anywhere - hiking, skiing, or while walking around town - and its operating flexibility brings the user many avenues of operating enjoyment. Its incredibly tiny FNB-83 Rechargeable Nickel-Metal Hydride Battery Pack provides up to 5 Watts of transmit power on the 144 MHz and 430 MHz Amateur Bands. Besides 144- and 430-MHz transceiver operation, the FT-60R provides receive coverage of the VHF and UHF TV bands, the VHF AM aircraft band, and a wide range of commercial and public safety frequencies!
NEW FEATURES ON THE FT-60R
New and exciting features of the FT-60R are the Emergency Automatic ID (EAI) function, that will automatically cause your FT-60R to transmit your callsign and engage your rig_s microphone, even if you are disabled and unable to press the PTT switch; Enhanced Paging and Code Squelch (EPCS), that allows you to page a particular station and only receive calls from that station, if desired; and a security Password feature, to prevent unauthorized use of your transceiver.
FEATURE HIGHLIGHTS
• Over 1000 Memory Channels w/Alpha-numeric Labels
• Ten Memory Banks for Channel Allocation
• High Power Output: 5 Watts
• Long-life FNB-83 (7.2 V/1400 mAh) and Overnight Charger included
• CTCSS and DCS Encode/Decode, with Split Tone and DCS Encode-only Capability
• One-Touch NOAA Weather Access
• NOAA Severe Weather Alert with Alert Scan
• Nine DTMF Auto-Dialer Memories
• Two Front Panel Programmable Keys
• Convenient Access Key for Vertex Standard’s WIRES™ (Wide-coverage Internet Repeater Enhancement System)
• RF Squelch (only passes signals exceeding programmed level)
• Mono-band and Memory-only Operating Modes
• Rugged Die-cast, Water-resistant Case Construction
• Huge LCD Display
• Transmit Time-Out Timer (TOT) and Automatic Power-Off (APO)
• Automatic Repeater Shift (ARS)
• YAESU’s exclusive ARTS™ (Auto-Range Transponder System) which "beeps" the user when you move out of communications range