Subject: ICOM IC-229H, and AM aviation band modification Quick summary: - Yes, it does do AM demodulation. Many people are unhappy with its performance, but I was impressed. Variation in radios, or variation in tastes, who knows.... - Yes, it requires a hardware mod. No, the procedure described in "CQ" magazine is not exactly right. Yes, it is easy to do. - It has a wide bandwidth and is sensitive. Therefore, you may have intermod problems. More detailed: In the true spirit of the net, I got several responses that were just noise. Along the lines of "No, I know nothing about that radio, but a buddy of mine got a different one once, I think maybe it was a Yaesu, but I'm not certain. It might have done AM demodulation. Or then again maybe it didn't, now that I think about it. Well, I guess I don't know. Hope this is a big help to you!!" Duh. However, several were helpful, and the more useful ones are excerpted below. There was a review of the radio in "CQ" this past year (don't have the exact date in front of me). The following change/additions need to be made to the text where it describes how to enable aviation-band AM receive: -- To disassemble the radio, (a) When removing the top and bottom case halves, be careful, as the speaker is connected to one! (b) Remove the three knobs by gently pulling them straight out from the panel. (c) With a spanner (or needle-nose pliers) remove the nut mounting the front panel to the microphone connector. (d) Now remove the screws holding the front panel (black plastic) to the frame, and remove that panel. (e) You will now find that there is a subassembly with a "backbone" of 0.25" machined plexiglass, held to the frame with three machine screws. Remove those screws and gently swing that subassembly away from the frame. You now have access to the diode that must be clipped. Otherwise, things are done as the review says. The CQ review gave a good report of its AM aviation band performance. I would agree with that, and suspect that at least some of the complaints were due to the original signal -- there's a ton of background noise in a private plane. However, airliners should sound quite clear. Sensitivity, even that far away from the ham band, seems good. Airliners at altitude up to 50-100 miles away can be heard, even with just a J-pole antenna near ground level. (assuming you're not at the bottom of a steep valley, of course!) Sensitivity in other non-ham bands seems good as well, it has no trouble picking up sheriff's dispatchers maybe 45 miles away. Too much sensitivity and too much bandwidth may cause big problems with intermodulation, if you're in an RF-rich environment. I have no idea how it would perform in, say, downtown Chicago, but I suspect you'd hear all sorts of intermod and images. There were a couple of odd images I noticed, but nothing distractingly bad. The built-in attenuator might help. My father is now using one, with a J-pole at 53' and an 11-element beam at 48', from relatively high ground in a rural, hilly area. It seems to do very well for such an application, as it gives you three radios (ham, aviation, public-service scanner) in one box. 45-50W output means you can hit what you can hear, and it's sensitive enough to hear quite a bit (some some repeaters out to 100 miles are useful). At least two NOAA weather broadcasters around 162 MHz are audible. Oh yeah, when you rotate the knob in "VFO" mode to tune up from 174 MHz, it skips to the range 340-380, and then to 870-890, before wrapping around to 118 again. Don't get excited, it doesn't receive in 340-380 or 870-890, as the VCO won't lock up there. It does AM demod 118-134 and FM 134-174 MHz. On to the excerpts.... For the following, only the pad pair marked as "D5" had a diode in my dad's: > Here's some info on the IC229A/H, (indirectly) from ICOM: > > The stock radio has RX: 136 - 174, TX: 140-150, FM only. > > When diode D5 (conventional, upright diode on the logic board) > is cut, 118 - 135.995 MHz can be received in AM mode. > [Local reports indicate the audio is acceptable but not as good as, > for example, AM received on a PRO-2004 scanner] > > To expand TX to 136 - 174 MHz, locate chip diode D9. Ascertain that > the vertical pair of pads to the right are OPEN. Short the next pair > of vertical pads to the right [with solder, perhaps]. > > These changes pertain only to the USA model. > > Here's some ASCII art to clearify: > _________________________________________________________ > R5 R4 | > R1 | > R2 . . > D1 D2 > -----------+ .. .. > | -D3- > | -D4- > IC4 | -D5- > -----------+ -D6- > -D7- . .. _ _ > D8 D9 _ _ > O .. . > C7 > X1 | > ________________________________________________________|