Baofeng UV-5R Radio – 8 Things It Can Do for You

by Aden Tate
Baofeng UV-5R Radio

What is the de facto prepper ham radio? The Baofeng UV-5R radio. I know, I know – the purists within the ham radio community scoff, but there is a world of a difference between the ham radio community and the prepper community. There’s overlap, to be sure, but the two communities are not the same.

One is interested in staying alive during times of disaster, and the other is comprised of retired electrical engineers who are interested in talking about how many cups of coffee they drank that morning. They’re not the same.

BAOFENG UV-5R Dual Band Two Way Radio (Black), 144-148MHz & 420-450MHz
  • High / Low Power Settings (4W/1W) Programmable Amateur Radio
  • Frequency Range: 65-108 Mhz (Only Commercial Fm Radio Reception) Vhf: 136-174 Mhz(Rx/Tx). Uhf: 400-520 Mhz(Rx/Tx)
  • Customize Channel Names, The Boot Display And More By Using The Pc03 Ftdi Programming Cable
  • 1500Mah Battery; Broadband (Wide) 25Khz / Narrowband (Narrow) 12.5Khz Selectable

Don’t listen to the naysayers here, though. The UV-5R is still a great tool to add to your communications toolbox. It can do a heck of a lot, and even though it’s not as high-quality of a radio as what ICOM or Yaesu puts out, it can still get the job done.

Yes, programming it can be a little frustrating, but I’ve written a Better Baofeng UV-5R Instruction Manual that spells out everything you are apt to encounter.

What are some of the things you need to know before you buy, though, so that you go into UV-5R ownership with realistic expectations? Let’s take a closer look…

What Can You Do with a Baofeng UV-5R Radio?

Quick Note: 2018 was the year that Baofeng started creating neutered UV-5Rs.

For reasons that make no logical sense unless you consider sinister purposes, around 2018, the FCC started to get mad at the idea of people being able to use the radio spectrum and made it illegal for people to get Baofengs that could handle non-ham bands.

A good guide book, if you need supplemental reading, is The Guerrilla’s Guide to the Baofeng Radio.

Sale
The Guerrilla's Guide To The Baofeng Radio
  • Scout, NC (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 156 Pages - 12/01/2022 (Publication Date) - Independently published (Publisher)

To my knowledge, they specifically targeted Baofengs as well. You don’t see the same restrictions on a Yaesu handheld units or the like. But Baofengs are within the financial reach of the common man at $25 each, and I suppose that was a bad thing?

As a result, Baofeng began importing UV-5R units into the States that could only handle 2m and 70cm, greatly reducing the effectiveness of this tool.

1) You Can Apparently Listen to Russian/Ukraine Military Transmissions

You would quite literally have to be in Ukraine, be very close to the fighting, and have a pre-ban ‘feng for this, but there are numerous photographs that have come out of the Ukraine war of both sides of the fighting carrying Baofeng radios. They were sending out their military information over analog signals, unencrypted, in the clear.

It’s advisable to increase the range of your Baofeng by adding the optional 15.6″ antenna.

Authentic Genuine Nagoya NA-771 15.6-Inch Whip VHF/UHF (144/430Mhz) Antenna SMA-Female for BTECH and BaoFeng Radios
  • Enhanced Signal Strength: The Nagoya NA-771 Dual Band Amateur Antenna offers a notable performance increase, with a gain of up to 3 dBi. This enhancement ensures a powerful boost to your radio's signal strength, providing clearer and more reliable communication.
  • Rugged and Flexible Design: Ideal for outdoor enthusiasts, this 15.6-inch standard whip antenna is crafted to withstand the challenges of nature. Its soft yet durable flexibility makes it far superior to OEM radio antennas, perfect for outdoor and camping activities.
  • Precision Engineered for Peak Performance: Each Nagoya Standard Whip Antenna is meticulously tested and fine-tuned to operate optimally. This commitment to precision engineering guarantees unmatched performance in communication.
  • Broad Compatibility with SMA-Female Connector: This antenna, featuring an SMA-Female connector, is tailored to offer broad compatibility with numerous radios, such as popular models from Baofeng and BTECH. This design ensures effortless integration with a variety of amateur radios, making it a versatile and practical choice for enhancing communication capabilities across different devices.
  • BTECH is proud to be in the USA, which allows you to have the best available local support for any issue that may arise. BTECH only engineers and develops radio products. That brand focus allows you to have the best available radios and accessories with the most features, with real USA warranty and support.

For modern conventional forces, that’s both unheard of and stupid. However, let this point to you just how versatile of a tool this is.

(For what it’s worth, Russian ground forces use 30-108 MHz as their operating frequencies.)

2) You Can Triangulate Where an Analog Ham Signal is Coming From

triangulate analog ham signal

Honestly, you can do this with any ham radio – you just need a directional antenna hooked up to it, a map, a compass, and a wee bit of time on your side. But the fact that you can do it with a $25 radio is pretty cool.

Ailunce AY01 Yagi Antenna,UHF 400-470MHz GMRS Radio Antenna,7dBi Base Station Antenna,Compatible with Ailunce HD1 HD2 Retevis RT86 RT97 Motorola Kenwood Midland Ham Mobile Radio,Repeater,Transceivers
  • This UHF 400-470MHz base station antenna features a 7 dBi signal with up to 50W of power; with UHF-F Connector; In the 430-440 MHz band it will have best communication;coaxial cable is not included
  • Aluminum alloy material; outdoor gmrs vertical base antenna have rugged construction to withstand harsh outdoor conditions; light weight for handheld use
  • Yagi antenna has good directivity and 7 dBi higher gain; significantly increase the range of your walkie-talkie
  • With pre-assembled design; simple construction and easy assembly and disassembly; impedance matching can adjust the impedance of the antenna to obtain the maximum power transmission
  • UHF Yagi antenna weighs only 0.85lbs; completely handheld and suitable for outdoor use;You can use it for direction-finding;long-distance communication

You can make your own directional antennas for pretty cheap, but it’s a lot less work to pick up a portable Arrow Yagi antenna that will work with your UV-5R.  

3) You Can Get a Survival Retreat Farm Squared Away Comms-Wise for $100

Have a big homestead that you want to be able to protect post-collapse? $100 will get you four UV-5R units so that you can have a good comms plan in place to monitor your property, call for help, and the like. If you tried to do that with ICOM or Yaesu, you’re talking about potentially spending over a grand easy.

Get extra range without giving away your prepping habits by incorporating a stealth antenna in your home or retreat.

4) You Can Experiment with Ham Radio without Breaking the Bank

Just got your license but worried that you may not enjoy the hobby of ham radio? At $25 per unit, this is an easy way to dip your toes into the water to make sure that you actually enjoy talking with others via radio wave without dropping a grand on equipment.

If you want to know how to program your UV-5R, check out this guide I wrote up on how to use CHIRP.

5) You Can Equip All Vehicles with an Emergency Comms Source for Just $25

If you don’t have the money to drop into a mobile radio rig for each of your vehicles, but still want to have some form of emergency comms available for your family in the event of some type of major disaster, again, it’s hard to beat $25/unit.

The whole pre-ban radio and ham license requirements talk comes into the conversation here again, but if we’re talking about a true WROL situation, there is no law, so anything goes. That way, if your wife is at the store and your son is at basketball practice when the doo doo hits the fan (e.g., Perhaps cell phone towers have been taken down?) you’ll still be able to contact each other to figure out where everybody is, how they are doing, and so on.

6) You Can Send Out Your GPS Coordinates

send gps coordinates with radio

If you’re in some type of situation where you need somebody else to know exactly where you are at, then you may want to give them your GPS coordinates. You can do that through ham radio with a program called APRS – Automatic Packet Reporting System.

Keep in mind that if you’re doing this, anybody else who is looking for this information can find and use it. So, if you’re in a collapse situation where GPS is still functioning and you broadcast out your coordinates, you could potentially end up in a situation where somebody else finds out where you are at and gets there before your friends do.

Want to learn how to set up APRS on your UV-5R? Check out the below video. You are going to need a special cable and either a tablet, smartphone, or computer to do this.

7) You Can Use It Hands-Free

I don’t really recommend this, but it is possible. In the world of radio, there’s a feature called ‘VOX.’ This basically means you can simply talk to your radio, and it will detect somebody is talking and send out a transmission. Of course, you could end up sending a transmission you have no intention of sending by doing this.

A potential use here would be if you have VOX headsets and you’re communicating with some buddies on your homestead post-collapse as you coordinate a plan of action. Let’s say a hostile force is moving through and you want to keep both your hands free.

It’s a possibility here, but again, I wouldn’t entirely recommend this feature.

8) You Can Put It in Your Pocket Without Anybody Knowing About It

put the antenna and battery

If you’re in a situation where you need to EDC a radio, but can’t carry a bag, you could use a UV-5R in this situation. You are going to have to disassemble the components, though. Take the battery out (which is easy) and unscrew the antenna.

Put the antenna and battery in one pocket and the radio proper in another. You now have a radio on your person that can be assembled in less than 30 seconds, and that won’t leave a huge signature like many bulkier HT units will.

If you don’t take the battery out, the radio will turn on in your pocket and there is a very good chance you will end up making an accidental transmission.

FAQs:

Can a Baofeng Listen to Police?

It depends on whether you have a pre-2018 model or a post-2018 model. If you end up buying your Baofeng UV-5R at your local ham radio festival, you’re likely picking up an older model. Pre-2018 will allow you to listen to police frequencies.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eBut there is a caveat. Most police departments within the United States now use digital mode radios and some form of encryption. The police that still use analog radio signals in the clear where literally everybody can listen to them are few and far in between.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eIf you live in an area where your local police use analog signals (and you can use u003ca href=u0022https://www.radioreference.com/u0022 target=u0022_blanku0022 rel=u0022noreferrer noopeneru0022u003eRadioReference.comu003c/au003e to find out) and you have a pre-2018 model UV-5R, then yes, you can listen to police.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eOtherwise, the answer is no.

How Do You Jailbreak a Baofeng?

“Jailbreaking” a radio simply means that you make it so that you can send or receive on the full spectrum of what the radio can pick up. People do this themselves if they’re handy with electronics and a soldering gun.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eIf you’re not, you can send your Baofeng off to u003ca href=u0022https://www.gigaparts.com/u0022 target=u0022_blanku0022 rel=u0022noreferrer noopeneru0022u003eGigaparts.comu003c/au003e and ask for it to be MARS/CAPped. They’ll jailbreak your Baofeng for about $35.

How Can I Boost My Baofeng Signal?

There are three main things that you can do to get your transmission out further with a UV-5R. You can bump up the operating power level, you can get up higher, or you can use a better antenna.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eA UV-5R has three power levels: low, medium, and high. If you put your Baofeng on high power, you’ll push the signal out further than you would otherwise.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eHeight is a big deal here as well. These radios operate line-of-sight. They need to “see” each other. If you can get up high enough – like on a really tall building or mountaintop – you’ll increase how far your radio can “see.”u003cbru003eu003cbru003eLastly, getting a better antenna will help immensely. The stock antenna that comes with a UV-5R is junk. When you buy your unit, buy another antenna as well. I can receive u003cemu003eokayu003c/emu003e with the stock antenna, but I can’t transmit well at all.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eLearn how to build a jungle antenna. Buy a whip antenna. Get yourself set up with a roll up J-pole. Pick up an inexpensive Yagi. All of these are means that will get your message out further and allow you to hear from further away.

How Far Will 8 Watts Transmit?

As usual, ‘it depends’ is the real answer here. And what things really depend on here is line-of-sight and the type of antenna that you’re using. Of course, the weather, nearby foliage, the frequency used – these all matter as well.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eWant to know how far an 8-watt UV-5R will transmit in your area? Get out with a couple of buddies and experiment. If everybody has maps and knows where everybody else is, a drawing can begin to be made to figure out what the expected range is with your 8W UV-5R in your immediate locale.

What Happens if You Transmit On a Ham Radio Without a License?

If you transmit on a ham radio without a license the old men in your community will team up to hunt you down. Quite literally. Old hams refer to this as a “fox hunt.” They are fiercely protective of the government’s ownership of the ham radio spectrum and patrol, hunt, and turn in those who they find without a ham radio license operating equipment.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eThey do this via triangulation and they can figure out where the signal is coming from (you) by doing so. This can either give them your address – which they’ll promptly turn into the government along with a recording of your transmission – or they’ll know where your vehicle was and local street cameras or your phone will be used to determine who was at that position at that time.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eThen, the FCC will either fine you heavily (in some cases, I’ve heard of up to $10,000) or throw you in jail.

Can I Use a Baofeng As a Walkie Talkie?

We’ll assume that walkie-talkie is being used in reference to FRS/GMRS/MURS frequencies. Legally speaking, no, you cannot use any of those frequencies with a radio that has a detachable antenna. Don’t ask me why. I’ve still not been able to wrap my head around the logic of it. A UV-5R has a detachable antenna, and, therefore, it’s illegal to transmit on these frequencies with it.u003cbru003eu003cbru003eThat said, it is entirely possible to transmit on and receive FRS/GMRS/MURS frequencies with a UV-5R, provided it is a pre-2018 model.

What is the Most Powerful Baofeng Radio?

To my knowledge, this is the BF-F8HP. It’s an 8-watt Baofeng handheld radio, and I’ve yet to find any other Baofeng units out there that have a higher watt capacity. If you’re looking for as much power as possible from Baofeng, this is where to find it.

Further Reading

Want to dig further into what your Baofeng can do for you? Some people have found the following book helpful, though none of use have read it.

So, You just bought a Baofang Radio... Now What?: This is the Book you wished for covering in depth capabilities and how to's of Baofeng Radios
  • Biddle, Rodney Ellis (Author)
  • English (Publication Language)
  • 203 Pages - 09/09/2020 (Publication Date) - Rodney Biddle (Publisher)

What are your thoughts on the Baofeng radio? Are there tips or tricks we missed? Share ’em in the comments section.

You may also like

9 comments

David August 9, 2022 - 4:04 pm

While the UV-5R is a great starter radio, you might consider the newer UV-9S+ instead for SHF purposes. The 9S+ is an upgraded 5R but comes standard with some of the features that everyone pays extra to outfit their 5R with. The primary feature of the 9S in my opinion is the ability to charge it from USB instead of requiring the cradle or special battery. On the 5R, you have to buy an aftermarket battery in order to support USB charging without carrying around the cradle. The battery on the 9S has more capacity then the stock battery on the 5R, but is smaller then the USB capable battery for it, but the same add on battery makes the 5R about 2″ longer then with the factory battery. You can get a pair of replacement batteries for the 9S+ for around $15 if I remember correctly . The nice thing is both radios use the same programming cable and headset accessories. They do use different antennas, or at least the ones I have are not interchangeable. The 9S antenna is recessed a bit more so the 5R antenna won’t screw down far enough to engage.

Reply
Stephane September 4, 2022 - 7:11 pm

I have the BF-F8HP.
Is it possible to get a better battery with USB recharging capability?
Can I use a “doublet”antenna as I did on my PRC 10 in the French Military.
With that antenna, I went around the world with 5 watts at night.
Evidently with Q codes…

Reply
Dale cunningham September 4, 2022 - 2:39 pm

One of the main adversaries of the US manufactures and distributes this device. The reason it is so low priced is their low std of living. You can’t legally transmit without a federal license. So defend the constitution and enrich our enemies and dis ham operators who provide emergency comms on their own dime by falling for this crass effort at money grubbing. Get a license, a decent radio and do it right! Be an a US citizen, not a dupe.

Reply
Stephane September 4, 2022 - 8:57 pm

Mr Cunningham, I got the federal authorization to operate a ham radio BEFORE to buy the radio. Both my children served. Both went to the Middle East. I tear up listening to the National Anthem. I tear up saying The Pledge of Allegiance.
I was born somewhere else.
So, Mr Cunningham, please, go learn to play nice. No reason to treat others, unknown to you, like “merde”. Unless you want it thrown back at you, in more than one language, some of them very flowery and demeaning so much. Said with a smile……I just wanted to be able to converse with my children who have their own BaoFeng.

Reply
Gregory K. Sloat May 7, 2023 - 10:23 am

If you don’t want to use a radio made in China, better give up your cell phone, your computer, most of your appliances, and most of the things you buy. It’s an unfortunate fact of life that most of our “stuff” is now made in China. I don’t like it, but our own government and the major corporations did this to us.

Reply
Gerald C. Bohmer Jr. September 4, 2022 - 4:20 pm

I got my UV5r several years ago, shortly before I aced the Technician test. I’m still learning, and the book you pointed me to will be here Tuesday. Amazon has a lot of accessories for the little brick, including a 42.5″ foldable whip antenna. Brand name ABBREE. When I bought mine, I could only see a two-pack. Now singles show up. I try to remember to use smile.amazon.com for my purchases. I’ve picked National Foundation for Gun Rights as my charity. Amazon gives .5% every time I make a purchase.

Reply
Dale cunningham September 4, 2022 - 10:25 pm

Gerald and Stephane,
My remarks were not addressed to either of you but the words written in the ad which characterized ham operators as retired electrical engineers discussing how much coffee they drank in the morning. I accept each of you as US citizens and honor your motives. I was reacting to some “merde” that had already come my way. Please enjoy your radio but know that it (nor any other radio in its class made by anyone else) will not do everything the ad says it will do.
Peace!

Reply
Nunof Urbiz April 30, 2023 - 7:00 am

From what I’ve read just today, you don’t have to pay anyone to jailbreak a new UV-5R. You can do it yourself (depending on when it was made) by turning the radio off, then pressing and holding down the transmit, monitor, and VFO buttons at the same time while turning the radio on. If it worked on your radio, the display will show FACTORY when it turns on. It’s a little tricky to do with only two hands, but you can press the transmit and monitor buttons with one hand and the VFO button and turn the radio on with the other. If you’re not licensed, take the antenna off so you don’t transmit. The very short time the radio will have the transmit button pressed won’t hurt the radio without the antenna attached. You could also set the radio to an empty frequency to be safe. If you’re licensed as a ham, it shouldn’t be a problem at all. Now, before you flame me for telling unlicensed operators to key up their radio for two seconds without an antenna so you won’t be broadcasting, if you really want to pay someone else $35 to do the same thing, go ahead.

Reply
MCA March 28, 2024 - 4:58 pm

Has anyone actually done this ? Result?

Reply

Leave a Comment

As an Amazon associate, we earn from qualifying purchases. This site also participates in various other affiliate programs, and we may get a commission through purchases made through our links. Please read our complete Disclosures and Privacy Policy for more information.