Thanks for showing how to put a frequency in memory. I've been trying to figure this out all week ;-) And yes, I do have the manual. It's nearly inscrutable. I programmed the radio with the cable. But if I take a trip and want to program a repeater frequency &c to memory, well, you've showed me how to do it. Thanks!
I've had one now for two years, and it will do ten watts, if the SWR on the frequency is 1.0. I run a 18.8 inch abbree antenna on mine, and on a local repeater frequency I have a SWR of 1.03. I think the frequency is 144.775, some where around the middle of the band. My power output on that frequency is 9.97 watts. So it all depends on how well your HT and your antenna are set up.
Thank you, you explained how to access the FM receiver easy. Something I could not figure out. Also CHIRP will now program this radio. I love mine. Its a good little radio.
Battery full charged, without TX (just on stand by - RX), option 19 in menu RX power saver was OFF,18-DW=OFF, battery last at the first radio - 25 hours, the second radio - 28 hours until itself turns OFF. From total empty battery, needs 8,5 hours to full charge (until green lit).
What's the dif between the TYT TH-8000D and 8000E? I just got the former and it seemingly has all the bells and whistles of the 8000E, and out of the box Menu 11 (cross band repeater) toggles on and off without issue and when I ran the software, the cross band repeater function was on and working perfectly, and there was no printed sticker under the battery. I then suspected the radio had been programmed, returned, then resold to me, but I saw no sign of it being repackaged and, again, no label under the battery. So two questions. What's the difference between the two models and also, when stored, should the battery be removed from the radio and stored separately, or should it be stored attached and the radio turned off?
I see that this radio covers UHF 400-500. My question... is there a required modification or can an operater just enter an FRS frequency such as 462.562.5 from the key pad on this radio? Good review thank you.
Very useful video. Ya.....it has been a long time .......there was no new video? Can you talk a little about a single frequency repeater? How does it work. Thanks.
@@jafarsidik180 just saw this comment again. I've now done a video on DMR single frequency repeaters. A couple of videos actually. One on the gd-88 and the other on the hytera pd985
@radiosification i've noticed there is a scan setting in the menu. Is that an automated channel scan or something else? As neither the manual nor the manufacturers site mentions anything about having a scan function
I can't remember about this particular radio but usually they have scan enabled or disabled per channel and then when you scan on the radio it just scans the channels which were enabled for scan in the software
Any idea why when i try to use the repeater function is not working and i hear Error message ? I Press F then 1 again 1 i see scan off then F to change and there i hear error and i can't do anything. Any idea how to fix this problem ?
Thx sir, this TYT HT 10 watts high power radio does appear to be a better option than the BaoFeng offering of only 8 watts. Is it slightly more expensive than it's counterpart? I would like to see you demonstrate more on the manual settings, especially on it's high power transmission. The lengthier antenna, larger capacity battery & sturdier built looks promising for a beginner to HAM. Cheers!
There isn't much difference at all really in performance between 8W and 10W. I think if you look at other videos you'll see this radio doesn't actually reach 10W. A 5W radio is good enough for most people. I don't like the idea of holding a 10W transmitter right next to my head so would personally not use this on high power mode anyway
@@lukeWiz44 oh okay. No, it only does cross band repeat. The reason for this is that you generally need cavities for single band repeaters to separate them enough so that the RX side isn't desensitised by the TX side. With the exception of things that repeat by using TDMA such as TETRA and DMR single frequency repeaters
Hi I have a question on the MD 380 I tried installing the upgraded software but when I turn the radio on it does not turn on all the way do you knkw why that is.
Sir can you help me how to program or store duplex maritime frequency without using p.c where the tx frequency is diff. from its receiving frequency? Thanks a lot
@@radiosification i have other marine radio sir. The diff. is icom walkie talkie available here is single band, tyt is dual band thats why i bought this tyt. I just want to know if it is possible to program duplex frequency using only its keypad? Tnx
@@noelaspilla7145 if you aren’t a HAM operator, or a special licensing in your country, this radio is illegal to use. This should never be used for transmitting outside of authorized bands.
I notice you have the Channel name showing if it exists, and the frequency if there is no name. I have a UV8000D and am trying to do the same. Could you advise what setting value might accomplish this?
I can't remember for this radio specifically but there is usually a menu option. I think it's usually called mode or something like that. One of the options is frequency and then there will be channel and name, or something like that. Setting it to name would get it to show the channel name.
I don't know if that is something you can change then, I think it's just set for the model. The 8000E is a later model than the 8000D so I guess that must have been one of the upgrades they made.
im looking at getting this radio in the UK, me and a group of friends like to drive in convoy and was wondering what kind of distance could you get out of this being within a tin shell???? Or is their something more suitable for that task in your opinion
I think any of these sort of radios will work fine for you. You can get magmount antennas that go on top of the car to give you better range, because using a handheld in a car will probably block a lot of the signal. Licensing will be an issue. The only real license you could use would be amateur radio, but then the people you're talking to would need one too. Alternatively you could try CB radio. That way you don't have to worry about licenses and the range should be much greater if you get decent antennas. CB radios would be installed in the vehicles (either permanently or you can get a 12V lighter socket plug to power them) and the antennas would stick on the roof of the car by magnets. CB radios are not too expensive and you'd probably end up spending as much on an antenna as you will on the radio, if you go down that route.
Thank you! I'm interested in and that I see in the software, there is the possibility of manual adjustment of power at frequencies the part of the menu: program/test online. Have you tried it?
This is not suitable for mission critical applications. Buy a good brand of radio like Motorola, icom, Kenwood, hytera, Tait. I don't know if you would be able to communicate with hospitals because I don't know what type of system they use in your area, and what frequencies.
Then it should probably work as long as it's not a trunking system being used. But I still don't recommend you to use any of these cheap chinese radios. They're simply not reliable enough.
radiosification I've got a uniden analog scanner. I'm able to pick up hospitals and roaming ambulances.. but ill be done with medic school soon. looking for my own reliable peice. but don't have a whole Lotta cash.
going from 5w to 10w is +3db so will show approximately half an S point gain, not really going to make everyone go out and buy one is it. Keep the 5w output and make a duel band vhf & uhf hand held that has DMR aswell that would be a massive seller.
Yeah I agree, it's not life changing having double the power, but it will make some difference. Combining this with a better antenna, the radio should give a noticeably better range than a normal dual band on 5W with a stock antenna. I also agree with your second point. A dual band DMR radio would sell incredibly well.
Going from my uv82 5watt to my uv82hp. I more than doubled my suburban range ht to ht. 1 mile for 5 watt 2.5 miles for 8 watt both radios were tested with the nagoya 701 antenna. I just ordered this tyt8000e and a nagoya 771. I am expecting to get 3.5 mile suburban range. My goal is to reach my mom's house 3.5 miles away.
FM is analogue. Okay, yes you can have digital modes using frequency modulation but normally when someone says a radio is FM, it means analogue FM. If it was a digital mode then they would just say the name of the digital mode instead, like DMR or P25.
I don't know, I didn't really think about it. I personally don't really worry about it because I've seen some CBers using thousands of watts into a mobile antenna and standing right by it.
Some reports I've read regarding RF burns from the 8w Baofengs, I had one for a short time and swore I could feel it when I was transmitting. Decided to keep my UV-5R with a decent antenna and a high capacity battery.
haha yeah I dunno, I doubt it's really dangerous though. I wouldn't want to stand next to a 10W microwave transmitter for long, but I think the 400MHz band probably won't have any effect on the body
Thanks for showing how to put a frequency in memory. I've been trying to figure this out all week ;-) And yes, I do have the manual. It's nearly inscrutable. I programmed the radio with the cable. But if I take a trip and want to program a repeater frequency &c to memory, well, you've showed me how to do it. Thanks!
Thanks for the nice comment!
Thank you for taking the time to produce this review / tutorial , I learned several several features I did not see in the manual.
I've had one now for two years, and it will do ten watts, if the SWR on the frequency is 1.0. I run a 18.8 inch abbree antenna on mine, and on a local repeater frequency I have a SWR of 1.03. I think the frequency is 144.775, some where around the middle of the band. My power output on that frequency is 9.97 watts. So it all depends on how well your HT and your antenna are set up.
Thank you, you explained how to access the FM receiver easy. Something I could not figure out. Also CHIRP will now program this radio. I love mine. Its a good little radio.
I really like that quick save feature and that you can name channels from the radio.
Nice radio and great review
Cheers Lewis
Battery full charged, without TX (just on stand by - RX), option 19 in menu RX power saver was OFF,18-DW=OFF, battery last at the first radio - 25 hours, the second radio - 28 hours until itself turns OFF. From total empty battery, needs 8,5 hours to full charge (until green lit).
What's the dif between the TYT TH-8000D and 8000E? I just got the former and it seemingly has all the bells and whistles of the 8000E, and out of the box Menu 11 (cross band repeater) toggles on and off without issue and when I ran the software, the cross band repeater function was on and working perfectly, and there was no printed sticker under the battery.
I then suspected the radio had been programmed, returned, then resold to me, but I saw no sign of it being repackaged and, again, no label under the battery.
So two questions. What's the difference between the two models and also, when stored, should the battery be removed from the radio and stored separately, or should it be stored attached and the radio turned off?
Great. Thanks for sharing. Love your videos
Thanks!
Do you have to unlock this radio to get access to all of the frequencies? If so, how do you do that?
I didn't have to
I see that this radio covers UHF 400-500. My question... is there a required modification or can an operater just enter an FRS frequency such as 462.562.5 from the key pad on this radio? Good review thank you.
Hello Friend! How do I unlock other frequency bands? My radio is the TYT UV 8000D! Thanks for the video!
TYT UV8000E can it be used like as walkie talkie station, if/when the function crossband repeater is activated?
I think so yes
Very useful video. Ya.....it has been a long time .......there was no new video? Can you talk a little about a single frequency repeater? How does it work. Thanks.
Single frequency repeater on what? DMR?
@@radiosification Thank you for your time....
Ya on DMR offcourse ,
Thankyou ....
Thanks for your suggestion
@@jafarsidik180 just saw this comment again. I've now done a video on DMR single frequency repeaters. A couple of videos actually. One on the gd-88 and the other on the hytera pd985
@radiosification i've noticed there is a scan setting in the menu. Is that an automated channel scan or something else? As neither the manual nor the manufacturers site mentions anything about having a scan function
I can't remember about this particular radio but usually they have scan enabled or disabled per channel and then when you scan on the radio it just scans the channels which were enabled for scan in the software
Quick question, does this radio have a squishy front end, like the Baofeng BF F8-HP?
No
Any idea why when i try to use the repeater function is not working and i hear Error message ? I Press F then 1 again 1 i see scan off then F to change and there i hear error and i can't do anything. Any idea how to fix this problem ?
What type of receiver it used. Direct conversion?
No, it is superheterodyne. This is a good quality radio 👍
Thx sir, this TYT HT 10 watts high power radio does appear to be a better option than the BaoFeng offering of only 8 watts. Is it slightly more expensive than it's counterpart? I would like to see you demonstrate more on the manual settings, especially on it's high power transmission. The lengthier antenna, larger capacity battery & sturdier built looks promising for a beginner to HAM. Cheers!
There isn't much difference at all really in performance between 8W and 10W. I think if you look at other videos you'll see this radio doesn't actually reach 10W. A 5W radio is good enough for most people. I don't like the idea of holding a 10W transmitter right next to my head so would personally not use this on high power mode anyway
Could this be used as a same band repeater? Such as if I wanted to do a portable 70cm repeater at around 680mhz+5mhz? Thanks, and cheers
680MHz? What licence allows you to use that frequency?
@@radiosification that was a typo, my mistake. Meant 430.
@@lukeWiz44 oh okay. No, it only does cross band repeat. The reason for this is that you generally need cavities for single band repeaters to separate them enough so that the RX side isn't desensitised by the TX side. With the exception of things that repeat by using TDMA such as TETRA and DMR single frequency repeaters
@@radiosification good info. Thank you!
Hi I have a question on the MD 380 I tried installing the upgraded software but when I turn the radio on it does not turn on all the way do you knkw why that is.
Sorry I meant firmware
thank u for all informations , what is the password for unlocking the frequencies ? thank u
Very good :) Thumbs up from Ireland :) !
Sir can you help me how to program or store duplex maritime frequency without using p.c where the tx frequency is diff. from its receiving frequency? Thanks a lot
You should not ever use this type of radio for marine radio. Don't cheap out, buy a proper marine radio.
@@radiosification i have other marine radio sir. The diff. is icom walkie talkie available here is single band, tyt is dual band thats why i bought this tyt. I just want to know if it is possible to program duplex frequency using only its keypad? Tnx
@@noelaspilla7145 if you aren’t a HAM operator, or a special licensing in your country, this radio is illegal to use. This should never be used for transmitting outside of authorized bands.
I am looking for a repeater to use it on small drones to use it at sea? can this one used for this application ?
Well it isn't waterproof but apart from that I think it would work fine
I notice you have the Channel name showing if it exists, and the frequency if there is no name. I have a UV8000D and am trying to do the same. Could you advise what setting value might accomplish this?
I can't remember for this radio specifically but there is usually a menu option. I think it's usually called mode or something like that. One of the options is frequency and then there will be channel and name, or something like that. Setting it to name would get it to show the channel name.
Thanks... I was able to display the name, but un-named channels display blank
I don't know if that is something you can change then, I think it's just set for the model. The 8000E is a later model than the 8000D so I guess that must have been one of the upgrades they made.
Hello sir, i have tyt Th - UV8000D. It is working upto 1.5 kilometers. How i can set its range upto 10+ kilometers???
Go on top of a hill or tall building
@@radiosificationnot possible by setting??
im looking at getting this radio in the UK, me and a group of friends like to drive in convoy and was wondering what kind of distance could you get out of this being within a tin shell????
Or is their something more suitable for that task in your opinion
What license are you planning on using it on?
Still looking into that, depending on pricing and stuff
I think any of these sort of radios will work fine for you. You can get magmount antennas that go on top of the car to give you better range, because using a handheld in a car will probably block a lot of the signal. Licensing will be an issue. The only real license you could use would be amateur radio, but then the people you're talking to would need one too.
Alternatively you could try CB radio. That way you don't have to worry about licenses and the range should be much greater if you get decent antennas. CB radios would be installed in the vehicles (either permanently or you can get a 12V lighter socket plug to power them) and the antennas would stick on the roof of the car by magnets. CB radios are not too expensive and you'd probably end up spending as much on an antenna as you will on the radio, if you go down that route.
Thank you for your help :)
Little help pls :)
I can´t scan in chn. mode when I press F than Scan the radio say error
in freq. mode I have no problems
Thanks
Make sure that "scan add" is set to "add" in the programming software for the channels you want to scan
Thank you Bro problem is solved!!!
Hi, what is the different between this TYTUV8000E vs TYT UV8000D. Thanks.
8000E is an upgraded model. I'm not sure the exact different but I think that maybe the D version doesn't have the crossband repeater
Can this radio announce the battery voltage with voice on demand? (ie: from the keypad)
Great review. Thanks
Always enjoy your videos. Do you ever show your face or do you prefer the anonymity?
I prefer the anonymity. I don't really like the idea of people recognising me in the street off youtube.
Hello, I'm interested in this handset, is it possible scanning ctcss/dcs?
Yes it can, but very slowly
Thank you!
I'm interested in and that I see in the software, there is the possibility of manual adjustment of power at frequencies the part of the menu: program/test online. Have you tried it?
I have not tried any adjustment of the power on the programming software, no
What's the difference with the UV-8000E and UV-8000D?
I don't know, I was told that the E version is improved.
Oh, okay. I suppose E is after D.
need a decent HT for ems. would I be able to communicate with hospitals on the frequency?
This is not suitable for mission critical applications. Buy a good brand of radio like Motorola, icom, Kenwood, hytera, Tait. I don't know if you would be able to communicate with hospitals because I don't know what type of system they use in your area, and what frequencies.
radiosification I've got all the frequencies, dial tones, ctcss rx and tx freqs. and they are in the range.
Then it should probably work as long as it's not a trunking system being used. But I still don't recommend you to use any of these cheap chinese radios. They're simply not reliable enough.
radiosification I've got a uniden analog scanner. I'm able to pick up hospitals and roaming ambulances.. but ill be done with medic school soon. looking for my own reliable peice. but don't have a whole Lotta cash.
Surely the company you're working for will provide you with suitable radio equipment?
going from 5w to 10w is +3db so will show approximately
half an S point gain, not really going to make everyone go out and buy one is it.
Keep the 5w output and make a duel band vhf & uhf hand held that has DMR aswell
that would be a massive seller.
Yeah I agree, it's not life changing having double the power, but it will make some difference. Combining this with a better antenna, the radio should give a noticeably better range than a normal dual band on 5W with a stock antenna.
I also agree with your second point. A dual band DMR radio would sell incredibly well.
Going from my uv82 5watt to my uv82hp. I more than doubled my suburban range ht to ht.
1 mile for 5 watt
2.5 miles for 8 watt
both radios were tested with the nagoya 701 antenna.
I just ordered this tyt8000e and a nagoya 771. I am expecting to get 3.5 mile suburban range. My goal is to reach my mom's house 3.5 miles away.
@@rickrobs9398 did tyt give you a better range? How would you compare its reception and tx to a baofeng?
Mantap..... Bali - Indonesia go head...
what?
is this Digital Radio ??
No, it's FM
I know This is FM but is this Digital or analog radio ??
FM is analogue. Okay, yes you can have digital modes using frequency modulation but normally when someone says a radio is FM, it means analogue FM. If it was a digital mode then they would just say the name of the digital mode instead, like DMR or P25.
Hello alarm button off ?
Your comment makes no sense to me
Waterproof?
Nope
10 watt portable? isn't that a dangerous level of RF for a portable.
I don't know, I didn't really think about it. I personally don't really worry about it because I've seen some CBers using thousands of watts into a mobile antenna and standing right by it.
Some reports I've read regarding RF burns from the 8w Baofengs, I had one for a short time and swore I could feel it when I was transmitting. Decided to keep my UV-5R with a decent antenna and a high capacity battery.
Gee at 10W you would not want to have a very long QSO or you would be starting to fry your brain lol
haha yeah I dunno, I doubt it's really dangerous though. I wouldn't want to stand next to a 10W microwave transmitter for long, but I think the 400MHz band probably won't have any effect on the body
+radiosification yeah true, but I think I prefer to stick with 5w.
there is also a 25w HT available as well
I heard about that! That's absolutely crazy! Now I wouldn't want to use 25W on a handheld, just in case.
+radiosification yeah I agree just craziness. I wouldn't like to it either unless through a external antenna
be careful with power I had an 8w poofeng and fried the finals on 8w in a few days of rag chewing.
Türkçe yecevir
This is not true
What is not true?