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first HT - completely lost on which one to get

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so i just passed my technician exam last week (finally) and now im trying to figure out what handheld to buy as my first radio. ive been reading forums and watching youtube videos for like two weeks straight and honestly i feel more confused than when i started. everyone seems to have really strong opinions and half the threads end up in arguments about baofeng vs yaesu vs whatever else.

my main thing is i want to hit our local repeaters on 2m and 440 and maybe eventually do some simplex when i go hiking. budget is somewhere around $100-150 but i could stretch a little if something is really worth it. im not looking to do anything fancy, just get on the air and start actually using this license i worked for.

is the baofeng UV-5R genuinely fine for starting out or is the programming nightmare as bad as people say? ive also seen the yaesu ft-60r come up a lot but thats pushing my budget. just want something i can actually figure out without an engineering degree lol

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congrats on passing the exam. ok so here's the honest truth about all this -- the UV-5R will absolutely get you on the repeaters and it works fine, the radio itself isnt bad for the price. the programming through the front panel is genuinely confusing though, its not just people complaining for no reason. the good news is CHIRP software is free and once you get it set up programming the thing takes like ten minutes. i used one for about a year before upgrading and have no real regrets about starting there.

that said if you can swing the FT-60r i do think its a nicer radio to actually use day to day, the menu system makes more sense and the audio is noticeably better. also tougher physically which matters if youre taking it hiking. either way you're gonna have fun, just get something and get on the air -- you can always upgrade later and the first radio never ends up being the last one anyway

I went through this exact same thing like 8 months ago. Ended up with the Baofeng to start and honestly dont regret it at all, just download CHIRP before you do anything else and save yourself the headache. The one thing I will say is the stock rubber duck antenna that comes with it is pretty lousy, I noticed a real difference when I swapped it for a nagoya NA-771 which is like $12 on amazon. small upgrade but worth it for hitting repeaters especially if youre not super close to one.

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