On the 757 and computer control, I've found it easy to do and it requires very little hardware. The simplest interface I have built consisted of an optoisolator and nothing else contained in a nine pin D-shell connector on the rear of my laptop. The optoisolator is wired with the collector and emitter across the data input pins on the rear of the 757 (emitter at ground, collector on the data input pin). The LED side of the optoisolator is driven very simply by wiring the LED connections such that the diode is turned ON when the data pin sends a ONE (data pin goes to the RS232 level of -3 to -15 volts). No current limiting resistor is needed because the port hardware can only source 10 ma anyhow. When a zero is sent, the polarity goes positive, but an LED is still a diode, so it doesn't conduct in that direction. It works and has been in use in my car on long trips with a program I wrote to scan my 757 through interesting frequencies, or do channelised tuning and at home to scan interesting shortwave frequencies. (it was very useful during the gulf war to be able to scan tables of frequecies for interesting listening) The 757 expects to see data at 4800 baud, and you have to follow the information in the manual on how to send the data (basically you push 5 bytes of information onto a stack). I uploaded a program in Turbo Pascal to CI$ several months ago that I wrote to control my 757. It's in the hamnet software area and called something like 757CAT.ZIP. I think I put the pascal source and the .exe both on there. The only drawback I could see was that in the 757GX, there is no provision to send data back out from the radio to the computer. But that doesn't make a lot of difference. I think the GXII does do bidirectional data, and my 736 will do some but basically the Yaesu radios are mostly set up just to accept external commands simply and easily. As far as the hardware requirements, none of the radios mentioned seem to be any more hardware ready for computer control than the 757. They all seen to require some sort of RS232 to TTL level interface box, usually priced in the $100 range. And you can build a variety of homebrewed solutions for that using max232's, 1488/1489's or doing it dirt simple with the optoisolator idea above. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- | F. Kevin Feeney WB2EMS | COFFEE: That wonderful elixir | | | that makes life possible | | EMAIL - kfeeney@helios.tn.cornell.edu | before noon. | | CIS - 72237,2760 | |