Baofeng UV-9R Pro (used once)
The comms half of a serious loadout, barely touched. This Baofeng UV-9R Pro has been used exactly once — no damage, no scratches, nothing rattling. It’s the rugged, weather-sealed version of the radio that’s become the default handheld for milsim players who’ve outgrown shouting across the field.
Charges over USB-C — the small thing that quietly matters, because it means the same cable as your phone keeps it topped up, no proprietary cradle to lose. Comes with the original battery and antenna. That’s the lot: no external mic, no extras, just a clean radio ready to program and run.
At a glance: Baofeng UV-9R Pro handheld two-way radio. Used once, no damage or scratches. Includes original battery and antenna, charges via USB-C. No external mic or extras.
What’s included
✔ UV-9R Pro radio
✔ Original battery
✔ Original antenna
Features
USB-C charging
Same cable as your phone — no proprietary cradle to forget at home.
Rugged, weather-sealed body
The Pro is the toughened UV-9R — built to cop mud, dust and a QLD downpour.
Dual band
VHF and UHF in one handheld — the milsim default for a reason.
Barely used
Run once — effectively new condition at a used price.
Condition
Used once. No damage, no scratches, no wear — about as close to new as a used item gets. Original battery and antenna included; no external mic or other extras. As with every listing on RedSpear: verified seller, and payment runs through RedSpear, not person-to-person.
Who this suits
- Milsim players building a comms loadout
- Squad leaders coordinating across a field
- Licensed amateur (HAM) operators
- Anyone after a tough, cheap second radio
🟣 The cheapest upgrade isn’t more power — it’s the antenna
Every new Baofeng owner’s first instinct is to chase watts for more range. But the stock stubby antenna is the single biggest thing holding these radios back — and it’s the easiest to fix. A longer aftermarket whip like a Nagoya 771 will do more for your real-world range than any power setting ever will, often turning a patchy across-the-field signal into clear comms with room to spare. It’s a sub-$25 swap and the most worthwhile thing you’ll do to one of these.
So if the range feels short out of the box, the radio isn’t the problem. Run the included antenna to learn it, then upgrade the whip when you want that extra reach for milsim — you’ll be amazed how much a $20 part changes the same handheld.
Gel blasters are legal for adults 18+ in Queensland — see the QLD gel blaster laws guide. More milsim gear on the marketplace.