In February 2026, amateur radio gained its fastest weak-signal digital mode — and immediately fractured it. FT2 promised ~4-second QSOs and contest-level throughput, but within days of its first on-air tests it split into two incompatible implementations. Here’s the full story of the “FT2 war,” why it happened, and what it means for HF operators everywhere.
Tag: Decodium
Explore Decodium and the FT2 digital mode on VU3DXR. Learn about this emerging protocol for HF amateur radio, including software setup, decoding tips, and real-world performance tests. Stay informed on the latest digital signal processing tools and experimental modes to enhance your DXing capabilities.
FT2 Digital Mode: Speed King With Serious Growing Pains
FT2 promises ultra‑fast QSOs with 3.8‑second cycles and up to 240 contacts per hour, but early adopters are divided. This in‑depth report analyzes FT2’s technical trade‑offs, including its weaker –12 dB sensitivity, very tight ±50 ms clock requirement, Windows‑only Decodium client, and limited award support. It also compiles global feedback from Facebook, Reddit, YouTube, blogs, and WhatsApp groups—ranging from contesters who love the speed to operators who see FT2 as risky, unnecessary, or too fragile for weak‑signal DX.
FT2: The Fastest Digital Mode in Amateur Radio
Developed by Martino Merola, IU8LMC, from the ARI Caserta team in Italy, FT2 is a genuinely operational new digital mode — not vaporware, not a proposal. It was publicly verified on 16 February 2026, with dozens of real QSOs logged on 40m and 80m bands.

