I have this HF radio onboard Spindrift.
If anyone has some working knowledge of it and would like to meet me at the CYCA, please send me an email. 
Do you have the Freq card.
they are group together when programmed and groups reflect usage in different parts of the world
Beautiful very powerful HF transceiver. Typical wide band from .1 MHz to 30 MHz continues, all types of modulation.
For full power requires 20amps from bat.
Receiver is wide range but transmitter as per Aus. law is limited to marine or amateur bands. Sometimes there is the unit reprogrammed to all over.
That would be a gold. As we know HF marine is dead, apart of weather and coast guard, believe, still monitor 2182kHz.
Now , how well is receiver working, transmitter can test on short waves.
Do you have the Freq card.
they are group together when programmed and groups reflect usage in different parts of the world
Could you explain what the Freg is please?
Beautiful very powerful HF transceiver. Typical wide band from .1 MHz to 30 MHz continues, all types of modulation.
For full power requires 20amps from bat.
Receiver is wide range but transmitter as per Aus. law is limited to marine or amateur bands. Sometimes there is the unit reprogrammed to all over.
That would be a gold. As we know HF marine is dead, apart of weather and coast guard, believe, still monitor 2182kHz.
Now , how well is receiver working, transmitter can test on short waves.
I will put some time into it and report back. Thanks for your help.
Unit covers all HF range.
You can easily listen all radio stations on long , medium, short waves.
Longwave AM Radio = 150kHz - 280kHz (LF)
Mediumwave AM Radio = 530kHz - 1610kHz (MF)
Shortwave AM Radios =6MHz - 26MHz
Also most importantly it covers all between, range 1.6MHz to 6MHz.
MF/HF marine bands, use 2182 kHz, 4125 kHz, 6215 kHz, 8291 kHz, 12 290 kHz
Radio amateur bands 1.8MHz, 3.5MHz and others.
Very HF covers radio beacons used for marine and older aircrafts navigation, /radio bearings/
instrument used on planes, RDF radio direction finder.
select AM, no BFO, anything here AM Radio = 530kHz - 1610kHz
ignore antenna tuning, perhaps faint station brings up, but it's important
for transmitting only.
perhaps I can mention, 40 years ago I was very active on HAM waves
now ex OK1DSM
Marine Rescue NSW have given HF away, totally. The operators in Queensland that used to provide a HF following service went by the wayside a decade or so ago. There was an NZ station, haven't heard of them for years.
I doubt you will find a marine HF station in Australia. Maybe a few ham operators.
Some global cruisers use it to keep in touch.
Unfortunately, the set is additional weight on your boat.
I keep my old hf radio working and maintained
Check this link out for frequency info
www.bom.gov.au/marine/radio-sat/voice-services.shtml#:~:text=Wiluna%20(VMW)%20broadcast%20schedule,-Marine%20weather%20warnings&text=high%20seas%20areas.-,The%20broadcast%20is%20available%20on%20the%20following%20frequencies%20(kHz)%3A,2056%2C%206230%2C%208113%2C%2012362
Marine Rescue NSW have given HF away, totally. The operators in Queensland that used to provide a HF following service went by the wayside a decade or so ago. There was an NZ station, haven't heard of them for years.
I doubt you will find a marine HF station in Australia. Maybe a few ham operators.
Some global cruisers use it to keep in touch.
Unfortunately, the set is additional weight on your boat.
Tas Maritime still runs HF skeds and weather for Tas and Strait.
Dover Radio ruins sleds for SouthernOcean if arranged
Marine Rescue NSW have given HF away, totally. The operators in Queensland that used to provide a HF following service went by the wayside a decade or so ago. There was an NZ station, haven't heard of them for years.
I doubt you will find a marine HF station in Australia. Maybe a few ham operators.
Some global cruisers use it to keep in touch.
Unfortunately, the set is additional weight on your boat.
Tas Maritime still runs HF skeds and weather for Tas and Strait.
Dover Radio ruins sleds for SouthernOcean if arranged
Thanks for the update.
Marine Rescue NSW have given HF away, totally. The operators in Queensland that used to provide a HF following service went by the wayside a decade or so ago. There was an NZ station, haven't heard of them for years.
I doubt you will find a marine HF station in Australia. Maybe a few ham operators.
Some global cruisers use it to keep in touch.
Unfortunately, the set is additional weight on your boat.
Tas Maritime still runs HF skeds and weather for Tas and Strait.
Dover Radio ruins sleds for SouthernOcean if arranged
I was thinking that myself. After my vhf carked it on entry to bass strait all I had was Hf and that only received. Tas marine radio was about the only thing I picked up.
Do you have the Freq card.
they are group together when programmed and groups reflect usage in different parts of the world
I don't know about a Freq card. Where do they fit.
Still some progress. I have found the manual.
Just playing with the dial and switches and received a language I am guessing came from the south pacific?
In theory you should have an LROCP (Long Range Operators Certificate of Proficiency) to use an HF radio in Aust but I doubt the Spanish Inquisition would jump out and give you the comfy chair if you happened to try it out.
Marine Rescue run courses up at Terry Hills www.marinerescuensw.com.au/courses-licenses/radio-courses/ and the qualification gets issued by AMC Tassie.
I did it a few years ago and they taught us a bit about how it worked as well as what to do. Everyone's different but I thought a couple of hundred dollars well spent if you want to go offshore.
That iCOM of BundeenaBoy's can probably access the HAM frequencies so Charriot's reply above is worth a look too.
Gerald
I have this HF radio onboard Spindrift.
If anyone has some working knowledge of it and would like to meet me at the CYCA, please send me an email. 
The mods site has some useful information about changes you can make to the IC-735 including expanding the TX frequencies, and repair information if needed.
www.mods.dk/index.php?ModelId=284&RadioId=1-icom&ModelRec=ic-735
For full power requires 20amps from bat.
Holy cow, I didn't know that. That's a lot of oomph.
That's when full power transmitting.
Best Ham band to try 3.6 to 3.8 Mhz.
It would be SSB. Something fun to listen.
Otherwise from 6Mhz commercial, half of the Pacific.
That's when full power transmitting.
Best Ham band to try 3.6 to 3.8 Mhz.
It would be SSB. Something fun to listen.
Otherwise from 6Mhz commercial, half of the Pacific.
Unit covers all HF range.
You can easily listen all radio stations on long , medium, short waves.
Longwave AM Radio = 150kHz - 280kHz (LF)
Mediumwave AM Radio = 530kHz - 1610kHz (MF)
Shortwave AM Radios =6MHz - 26MHz
Also most importantly it covers all between, range 1.6MHz to 6MHz.
MF/HF marine bands, use 2182 kHz, 4125 kHz, 6215 kHz, 8291 kHz, 12 290 kHz
Radio amateur bands 1.8MHz, 3.5MHz and others.
Very HF covers radio beacons used for marine and older aircrafts navigation, /radio bearings/
instrument used on planes, RDF radio direction finder.
select AM, no BFO, anything here AM Radio = 530kHz - 1610kHz
ignore antenna tuning, perhaps faint station brings up, but it's important
for transmitting only.
perhaps I can mention, 40 years ago I was very active on HAM waves
now ex OK1DSM
I will print this and take it to the boat.
Many thanks