Yup - had it from new in the 80's - it's never put a foot wrong and is still very sensitive. Only 10 memories but at that time it was a novelty. The buttons are not for direct frequency input unfortunately - you still have to twiddle the knob - but it's a very nice knob - the rubber is still good, not like some of the early Yaesu things that went all spongey. Buttons for 1Mhz up/down. Dual clocks. Useless scanning function. Noise blanker that I don't use. Power timer. Good audio from front mounted speaker. Runs from a 12volt battery so you can take it out to the country to get away from the QRM/N. The filters are a bit basic but OK for BC bands - I did a mod for the USB/LSB switching - you had a choice of which one you wanted to be on frequency! After the mod you set both to be correct. It's always been right on freq with little drift. Initially you may be dismayed at what appears to be high internal noise with the antenna disconnected, but as soon as you put an antenna on it you'll see that its sensitive all right - I checked mine a few years back and wrote down that the minimum discernable signal on CW was -130dBm - but I suspect the method. I don't know what they sell for in the US - they occasionally appear on out local auction site for about NZ$400 to 500 and get snapped up. The handbook and overhaul manual are downloadable. Try it - you'll like it. I did and still do - that's why 30 years on it's in my rack!