Radios

Yaesu VX-8DR

Owned · active Amateur VHF/UHF & DMR Released ~2008 (discontinued)

Overview

The Yaesu VX-8DR is a quad-band amateur handheld (6 m / 2 m / 70 cm TX, plus 1.25 m and wideband RX) built on a rugged, IPX7-submersible die-cast magnesium chassis, with native APRS via an internal AX.25 TNC, an optional clip-on FGPS-2 GPS module, and genuine dual-receive on independent VFOs capable of cross-band repeat in all four directions. Discontinued but still actively traded on the used market, it is the lineup's "throw it in the kayak" rig — the radio that goes outdoors when outdoors means rain, surf, or a creek crossing, and the only one that does APRS without an external setup. This deep dive covers the hardware, the receive/transmit mode envelope, the CHIRP / RT Systems programming workflow, codeplug-backup discipline, and field use. Migrated from the Scanners project as part of the Scanners/Radios restructure Stage 2 Phase 2 (2026-06-16).

Context

The VX-8 family ships three non-interchangeable models under similar designations — the VX-8R (the original 2008 release), the VX-8DR (this radio: quad-band, APRS-capable, FGPS-2 clip-on GPS support), and the tri-band VX-8GR with a built-in GPS. The VX-8DR earns its bench slot on a feature combination no current-production handheld replicates cleanly: IPX7 submersibility in a small package, an internal 1200/9600-baud APRS TNC, and honest dual-receive on independent VFOs. Yaesu's current FT-3D / FT-5D supersede it on display resolution and C4FM digital voice but trade away the IPX7 envelope.

Deep dive

  1. Vol 1 Yaesu VX-8DR — Vol 1: Introduction & Hardware
  2. Vol 2 Yaesu VX-8DR — Vol 2: Operations
  3. Vol 3 Yaesu VX-8DR — Vol 3: Programming
  4. Vol 4 Yaesu VX-8DR — Vol 4: Reference