Maybe I missed this piece of advice ,if you are buying the yaesu FT2DR buy an open spot 2 ,hotspot link it via WiFi at home or in your vehicle and the hotspot will transcode fusion and DMR (they use the same codec ) i have an open spot 1 & FT1XDR ,the open spot 2 can be connected wirelessly thru.iphone or Android. If you go to you tube look up K6UDA he has reviewed both versions of open spot and uses them .I'm aware of the specs, and as I stated above having it cut off at 524 MHz isn't acceptable to me. I also stated that since I already have a DMR capable HT, the TYT MD-UV380 (which is not the MD-380 that's so crazy popular and older) and it works great, DMR use can be addressed by this TYT unit and it would give me a leg up on Fusion which is something I have no experience with at all, never even heard anyone using that kind of digital hardware either anywhere I've lived in the US. The FT2DR/DE is pretty much as close to what I'm hoping to get as I've been able to track down so again a nod to JD for that mention, I didn't notice it at the Yaesu site earlier today when I was checking that out.
The Radioddity one is unfortunately nowhere near as capable as even the TYT I already own so, no sense tossing away another chunk of cash towards an inferior product than what I already own.
The Yaesu FT2DR/DE is what I've decided on so again, thank you for the recommendations and suggestions. It hits almost every aspect that I was hoping for - even works like a frequency counter-like/sniffer operation in some respects because it has a display mode that shows a bandwidth spectrum which is pretty awesome, Josh aka Hoshnasi mentioned that in his review video and even made use of that feature for tracking down some unknown transmission frequencies.
So your fusion radio can play in both camps ,if you later on move into a 400XDR it does it also , just make sure to enter both your call sign and DMR ID when you set the radio up.
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