Icom

Icom IC-7600

Key Specifications

Bands
160m–6m (HF + 50 MHz)
Power
100W SSB/CW/FM/RTTY, 25W AM
Frequency Range
Rx 30 kHz–60 MHz, Tx HF/6m amateur
Receiver
Dual DSP Superheterodyne
MSRP (USD)
Discontinued (originally ~$3,500)
Type
hf transceiver

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The Icom IC-7600 bridged Icom's traditional superheterodyne engineering and the SDR-forward direction that later defined the Icom IC-7300. Released as a flagship-class HF transceiver, it paired dual independent receivers with a real-time spectrum scope, robust DSP filtering, and 100 watts across standard HF and 6-meter bands. In 2026 used-market pricing, the IC-7600 frequently appears as a step-up alternative for operators who want dual-receive and flagship ergonomics without Icom IC-7610 pricing.

Overview

Icom positioned the IC-7600 for serious DXers and contest operators who needed dual independent receivers before direct-sampling SDR became mainstream. Main and Sub receivers operate independently — monitor split frequencies, run diversity experiments, or watch adjacent signals while working a pileup. The spectrum scope and waterfall provide visual band awareness that felt revolutionary compared to button-only flagships of the prior decade.

Transmit coverage spans 160 meters through 6 meters at up to 100 watts (25 watts AM). Built-in automatic antenna tuning, extensive memory channels, USB connectivity for digital modes, and remote-control capability via RS-BA1 position the IC-7600 as a full shack centerpiece. The architecture is superheterodyne with DSP rather than RF direct sampling — a meaningful distinction when comparing to IC-7300/7610, but not a limitation for most HF operating.

Operators comparing Japanese brands at similar used prices often cross-shop the IC-7600 against Yaesu's FT-950 and Kenwood's TS-590SG. Icom's interface philosophy and dual-receive workflow appeal to operators already comfortable with Icom menus and logging integration.

Specifications

Specification Detail
Frequency coverage (Rx) 30 kHz–60.000 MHz
Frequency coverage (Tx) 160m–6m amateur bands
Modes SSB, CW, RTTY, AM, FM
Output power 2–100W (SSB/CW/FM/RTTY), 1–25W (AM)
Receiver architecture Dual DSP superheterodyne
Dual receive Independent Main and Sub receivers
Spectrum scope Real-time scope and waterfall
Display 5.7" color TFT
Antenna tuner Built-in
Memory channels 101
Connectivity USB, LAN, CI-V
Power supply 13.8 V DC ±15%
Current drain Rx ~1.5–2.5A, Tx max ~23A
Dimensions 340 × 118 × 277 mm
Weight ~8.2 kg (18.1 lb)

Operating Notes

Dual-receiver operation is the IC-7600's defining advantage over single-receiver rigs like the IC-7300. DX operators run Main on the working frequency while Sub watches the split. Contest operators monitor adjacent run frequencies without losing primary band context. Learning the menu structure takes time — operators accustomed to IC-7300 touchscreens face a different UI paradigm.

USB connectivity supports FT8, Winlink, and logging with standard Icom drivers. Firmware updates remain available; verify version when buying used. The built-in tuner handles typical wire and vertical mismatches — severe antenna problems still need external matching.

Used buyers should test both receivers independently, verify spectrum scope display integrity, exercise all bands and modes they plan to use, and confirm included accessories. Higher-hour units may need fan or display attention — budget for a qualified technician if no local Elmer is available.

Who It's For

The IC-7600 suits experienced HF operators upgrading from IC-7300-class or entry rigs who want dual independent receivers and flagship Icom ergonomics at used-market pricing. It rewards operators who will use dual-watch and spectrum scope workflows — not buyers who only need single-receiver phone and FT8.

Less ideal for first HF purchases, portable operators, and anyone who specifically wants RF direct-sampling SDR architecture (choose IC-7300 or IC-7610). New buyers at flagship pricing should compare the IC-7610 for modern direct-sampling performance.

Related Reading

The IC-7600 represents Icom's superheterodyne flagship maturity — dual receivers and visual band awareness before the IC-7300 reset the mid-tier market.

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