ORIGINAL: hogflyer
The Futaba radio that comes with the NextStar Select doesn't have the best reputation. I was instructing on a students NextStar and had one of those fail - luckily the plane was in an attitude with the throttle closed in the landing pattern where it gently flew into the ground resulting in only a broken prop and bent nose gear. We checked the batteries and did a ground check, and everything was fine. But after a couple more flights on another day it failed again with the aircraft being a total loss crashing behind the parking lot.
For what you're going to spend for a replacement transmitter, you should seriously consider converting to a 2.4GHz radio. Two good radios that are at the lower end of the price spectrum but will last for years of sport flying are the [link=http://www3.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin/wti0001p?&I=LXPZT8&P=SM]Futaba 6EX[/link] and the [link=http://www3.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin/wti0001p?&I=LXTZU7&P=SM]Airtronics RDS8000[/link]. The 6EX gives you 6 channels and 6 model memory while the Airtronics gives you 8 channels and 10 model memory.
The Airtronics is getting known around my area as one of the best deals in radios, and very easy to program.
Hogflyer
Ummm....The Hobbico NexStar Select comes with a Futaba R/C system. It has no particular difficulties at all. We'd like to know where you got your information that it "doesn't have the best reputation".