Now I have another radio. I did order a Baofeng UV-9R Pro for evaluation. It came in this weekend. The case seems to be much more robust than a UV-5R, and it says it is waterproof! I don?t think I am going to intentionally test that? They might be wrong. As soon as it came in I charged the battery and programmed it using CHIRP. Since I converted my regular use HT?s to the BNC connector I added an adapter to this radio and a BNC antenna.
I have only used it a few times at this point on both simplex and repeaters, but it seems to work as well as any other HT. My opinion is it seems to have the same circuitry as the UV-5R in a more sturdy case. Otherwise, there is no significant difference in how the radio itself works from what I can tell. I plan to use it as my daily driver for a month to try to see how well it works for me as compared to a UV-5R.
What I like:
1. More robust case
2. Waterproof?
3. Similar button controls as the UV-5R (familiar)
4. Easy to program using CHIRP
What I dislike:
1. The belt clip could be designed better. Since the clip attaches to a belt around the user (if you remember to grab it before you leave the house) and the radio clips into that, I foresee the radio being dropped occasionally and/or the loss of the belt clip.
2. The plastic cover over the electrical contacts for the speaker/microphone must be removed to install the speaker/mic, or to program the radio. It has one removable little screw that holds it onto the radio. It requires a common flat-tipped screwdriver to remove/install the plastic cover or other accessories. If either the screw or the plastic cover gets misplaced, you will have open electrical contacts touching your hand as you hold the radio. Without the screw, you cannot install the speaker/mic, etc. Just losing the screw could sideline the radio until a replacement screw can be found. This is terrible engineering.
3. The radio does not come with an earphone/mic available similar to the UV-5R.
I guess I just don?t care for the way the belt clip works. I?ll put that down to personal preference.
I know most people either never use a speaker/microphone, or if they do, they leave it attached all the time. Either way would work fine with this radio. But if you need to install the speaker/mic while you are in the field, you will need a flat-tip screwdriver and hope you don?t drop the screw or lose the plastic cover. Waterproofness aside, I think the standard two-pronged plug is a better cots design. Of course, it could/should have been engineered differently without any potentially losable parts. I know that might make the radios more expensive? Maybe?
I have worked several events where I was in a loud noise environment, either in a crowd, near a loudspeaker, running commercial trucks, or marching bands making a lot of noise, etc. In those situations, I found it useful to quickly install the earphone/mic, or the speaker microphone so I could hear the radio better. This radio does not come with an earpiece like the UV-5R, but I did see that there are several types available if one should want to buy one.
For now, the jury is out.