KV5R: Icom IC-706MkIIG Mods and Tips
Pop the filter in, then go into setup and tell the radio it’s an FL-223 (not 232). This will allow you to
select the filter in SSB mode, as well as CW and RTTY. This will allow you to select Narrow on SSB and
have about a 450Hz wide bandwidth on your waterfall.
How it acts:
1. 1. In CW and CW-Reverse, it acts as expected, setting itself at 600 Hz. The IF shift will move it
around about 600 Hz.
2. 2. In SSB, it’ll act like a RTTY filter. In USB, it centers at about 2150 Hz. The IF shift will pull it
down to about 1000 Hz for PSK use. But in LSB, it positions itself low. The IF shift will move it
down through zero to the other sideband, or up to about 2k.
3. 3. Though called a 350 Hz filter (+-6db), my waterfall shows it to be about 500 Hz wide on
moderate signals. Kicking in the attenuator or rolling down the RF gain will narrow it just a bit. As
with all narrow filters, it works best when lightly loaded, so keep the signal level fairly low when
running digital modes.
4. 4. When running PSK at 1000 Hz with a strong signal, an harmonic image can be seen (barely) at
2000 Hz. It’s not a problem at all (it may be generated in my computer, not the radio).
How to use:
1. Run setup (Lock+Power) and select FL-223 for the slot in which the FL-232 is installed. That will
make the radio think it’s a 223 (a narrow SSB filter) so that you can then select it while in SSB.
2. For the usual computer soundcard digital modes (PSK, FSK, MFSK, etc), set USB, start with no
filter, set the signal at 1000 Hz, select the narrow filter (Fil N), and crank the IF shift all the way
right and that’ll center it at 1000 Hz in USB..
3. Or, simply leave the IF centered (filter at 2150) and then tune your desired signals there.
However, if you set your PSK software to copy at 2150, it will also transmit at 2150 and this may
confuse other users who are accustomed to using 1000 Hz only.
4. When a strong signal overloads your receiver, just shift the IF until your desired weak signal is
right on the edge and the filter will wipe out the nearby strong signal. If the offending signal is
splattering, complain!
Links to Other Great ’706 Places
file:///C|/My%20Downloads/Icom/706.asp.htm (14 of 15)5/4/2009 11:29:12 PM