John, The following is part of an email that I posted here nearly a year ago concerning Icom radios and 60m. Despite all the rumors you may here about someone using a particular radio or not the bottom line is whether the radio uses the 80m output filter or the 40m output filter when operating on 60m. Listen to the relays in the radio when tuning from 3.9MHz to 7.0 MHz and listen to where you hear the click. The original email follows. 73, Larry, W0QE Much has been written about operating Icom radios on 60m (5.3-5.4MHz) without damaging the radios. Some of it appears to factual and some appears not to be. I have access to several Icom radios and have made some meaurements. Most of the problems with operating on 60m deal with transmitting through the 80m low pass filter (which has signigicant loss at 5MHz). Measurements on where the radios switch the low pass filter are shown below. Icom 765: 80m LPF (2.00MHz - 3.999MHz), 40m LPF(4.00MHz - 7.999MHz) Switch from 80m LPF to 40m LPF at 4.00MHz Icom 746PRO: 80m LPF (2.00MHz - 4.999MHz), 40m LPF(5.00MHz - 7.999MHz) Switch from 80m LPF to 40m LPF at 5.00MHz Icom 756PRO: 80m LPF (2.00MHz - 5.999MHz), 40m LPF(6.00MHz - 7.999MHz) Switch from 80m LPF to 40m LPF at 6.00MHz Icom 756: Switch from 80m LPF to 40m LPF at 6.00MHz Icom 756PRO2: Switch from 80m LPF to 40m LPF at 6.00MHz >From the above table it would appear that the Icom 765 and the 746PRO would work well on 60m (using the 40m LPF) while the 756, 756PRO, and the 756PRO2 (using the 80m LPF) would not. In fact measurements on the 746PRO and the 756PRO show exactly this (with the radios operated into a dummy load). Icom 746PRO: 3.99MHz, 100w, DC current = 17A 4.99MHz, 100w, DC current = 22A 5.00MHz, 100w, DC current = 16.5A 5.36MHz, 100w, DC current = 16.5A 7.00MHz, 100w, DC current = 18.5A Notice how the radio draws 13.6V*(22A-16.5A)=74.8W more at 4.99Mhz than 5.00MHz. This power is all HEAT! Icom 756PRO: 3.99MHz, 100w, DC current = 17.5A 4.99MHz, 100w, DC current = 18A 5.36MHz, 50w, DC current = 20A (max. power 50w) 5.99MHz, 30w, DC current = 23A (max. power 30w) 6.00MHz, 100w, DC current = 15.5A 7.00MHz, 100w, DC current = 18.5A Icom 765: Could not easily measure DC current due to internal supply but would produce 100w on 5.36MHz. My conclusion is that the 765 and the 746PRO easily operate on 60m while the 756, 756PRO, and 756PRO are not well suited to operation on 60m. Both my 746PRO and my 765 produce 100W at 5.36MHz easily without heating up while my 756PRO can only muster 50W at 5.36MHz and does heat up significantly more than it does on the other ham bands. 73, Larry Benko, W0QE ---- Your Moderator: Dick Flanagan K7VC, icom-owner@mailman.qth.net Icom Users Net: Sundays, 1700Z, 14.316 MHz Icom FAQ: http://www.qsl.net/icom/