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Can someone tell me what tone this is?
nokones replied to WSCB609's question in Technical Discussion
DPL 023 is not a CTCSS tone. CTCSS is an analog tone in hertz and DPL is a digital code. The lowest standard CTCSS freq (Continuous Tone-Coded Squelch System) is 67.0 Hertz (cycles). DPL (Digital Private Line) or DCS (Digital Coded Squelch) lowest code is 023 and the highest code is 754. DCS/DPL may be either normal (D023N) or inverted (D023I) -
Me: I set our radios to channel 9 and locked the controls. Just use the side button, you don't need to touch anything else. KId: Okay, thanks dad! [fifteen minutes later] Kid: I pushed a bunch of buttons and now I can't talk to you. Me: Well, you unlocked the controls, set the radio to channel 3, set a PL tone, turned the volume all the way down, and... turned the roger beep back on. Little man loves his roger beep. They're FRS radios with a .5W TX max - we did a test and I can't pick them up outside the neighborhood. He did turn it to CH 15 (462.550) once and freaked out when it picked up local repeater traffic. That was fun. Couple of older guys talking about lunch and sports.
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eLectrOman joined the community
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WROC498 joined the community
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@Raybestos It's never stopped working for me. I did create a new password when prompted. The only update in SC in the past week is a short range repeater near Carowinds. If you need something in particular, I'll check on it for you.
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Output Tone 023 DPL 023 DPL Input Tone 023 DPL My ctcss setting does not go that low. 023 DPL
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Not for me at 19:11
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WSIS980 joined the community
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Monday, 18:35 EDST. Home page still messed up.
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GrouserPad reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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GrouserPad reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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GrouserPad reacted to a post in a topic: Password Expired Notice ???
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amaff reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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As much as my wife likes to talk, I still can't get her to talk on the radio.
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TrikeRadio reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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TrikeRadio reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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TrikeRadio reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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TrikeRadio reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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TrikeRadio reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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TrikeRadio reacted to a post in a topic: What's a radio good for anyway?
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Set his radio to channel 8-14.
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You were very likely listening to a linked repeater. There was a group in Michigan that linked a large number of GMRS repeaters. At one point, when it was thought to be quasi-legal, they even had it on their powerpoint they presented to the State Police on why they should get some grant money and how they offer a public service. (They are using their own backhaul, on their own towers.) They removed all information of the GMRS linking off the internet when the FCC redefined their thoughts on it, but did not stop linking the (their) repeaters. The info is still out there, just not on their website anymore. Here's a map of their linked GMRS receivers. Whoops, won't let me upload a screenshot. But search on Mi8 GMRS. Look at the document that shows up on a .gov domain.
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Retevis RT97L portable repeater -- first impressions
WRTC928 replied to WRTC928's topic in Equipment Reviews
The only thing I've ever won in my life is a coffee mug from the 11th Ohio Volunteer Cavalry YouTube channel. I was the first to correctly answer a cavalry history question during a livestream. It ain't much, but I won it. I'd rather win a GMRS repeater, though. -
WSIE977 joined the community
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My kid likes running around outside with an FRS radio and talking to me, which is fun for both of us. He also likes kerchunking and hitting the call/alarm button until I take the radio away, which is only fun for one of us. But we all start somewhere.
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I always thought it was for impressing the chicks!
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i love the radio when RV'ing the highways with friends.. Defiantly would be lost without it
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rfdlou joined the community
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We have 4 or 5 that semi regularly use the repeater. My wife isn't one of them but on rare occasions she'll chime into a conversation. She has no problem contacting me though our repeater though. I still think she thinks it's our private frequency. I know it's not.
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maricott joined the community
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amaff started following What's a radio good for anyway?
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They must all be using voice modifiers on the repeaters around here
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WSIU511 joined the community
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You know how women like to talk.....
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Yeah, back in the day of the old 3-watt analog "mobile phone" the wife would get into her car and call me to say she's on her way home from work. After a while I asked her why don't you call me from the phone on your desk before you leave? I told her that I love her, but you're costing me $0.25-cents each time you call from that damn phone. I'm glad the novelty wore off after a few weeks or I would be in the poor house.
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I kept my land line phone for a while since my youngest son was always misplacing his cell phone. He would use the land line to find his cell phone.
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Radios for the win!
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LeoG started following What's a radio good for anyway?
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My wife is heading up to NYs to babysit our 2 grandsons while my boy does his bowling tournament thing. I came home for lunch to see her off. After she got settled into the car I took off and by the time I got to the shop she's calling me on the radio. She doesn't have a radio in her car so she was in the house. Turns out she couldn't find her phone and radioed me to call it so she could hear where it was. I did, she found it LOL. And that's why a radio is better than a phone, in this case LOL.
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TD-H3 transmitting but not showing up on SWR meter
hxpx replied to hxpx's question in Technical Discussion
It's not a USB-C/12v power supply, though - it's a standard 5V/2A USB-A brick. My Anker desktop chargers are also 5V, though they support PD on the USB-C ports (which your article mentions does go above 5v but it has to be negotiated by the device and I'm pretty sure these H3 batteries aren't PD compatible). The Anker chargers work fine on other 5V USB devices, including some 18650/14500 batteries that charge via USB (through a USB-A to XH2.54 or similar connector). I'm guessing the charging circuitry is embedded in the USB-A plug housing. Side note: I do have a 12v USB power supply that came with my Thermoworks Billows fan for my smoker and that thing scares me. Other than the 12v warning on it, it looks identical to any other USB charger. It doesn't get separated from the fan or the controller. (Edit: I actually just checked and the Thermoworks 12v power supply has a USB-A socket. Which seems even sketchier. Good thing it has that grey-on-black 12V warning on it.) Yeah, it's gotta be the internal battery circuitry malfunctioning when the batteries are 100% charged. Unfortunately, there's no way to crack open one of these H3 batteries and poke at internal connections without destroying the shell, so I think my experiments end once I discharge/recharge this new battery. -
It looks like it depends on what state you live in. Most online vendors do collect Missouri sales tax but so far Giga Parts has not done so.
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Retevis RT97L portable repeater -- first impressions
GreggInFL replied to WRTC928's topic in Equipment Reviews
I guess this means I didn't win it. Well, poop. -
TD-H3 transmitting but not showing up on SWR meter
SteveShannon replied to hxpx's question in Technical Discussion
I found this snippet in a bunch of articles on hackaday: MURDEROUS “USB-C” PSUS AT YOUR LOCAL LIDL Remember the power article, specifically, how you get to higher voltages? Let’s recap: you get 5 V first, and then only after resistor detection. Higher voltages require negotiations over a digital protocol. This is a safety rule – it’s how you can use the same USB-C charger for your laptop, your phone, your wireless headphones, your devboards and whatever else. Now, what happens when someone builds a power supply with a fixed higher-than-5 V output, say, 12 V, and puts a USB-C plug on it? The answer is – seriously bad things happen. Such a power supply isn’t safe to be used on actual USB-C devices – it’s likely to destroy your phone or laptop, and it’s at a glance indistinguishable from an adapter that follows the USB-C rules laid out for everyone else. If you must use such an adapter for something every now and then, you ought to mark its cable with red tape in a way that covers the connector plug, so that you (or your loved one) don’t grab it to charge something else. Seriously, it’s easy to make a mistake, and the more you get comfortable with USB-C, the more likely you are to make it. Who does this? Well, many no-name manufacturers do, but also Lidl Parkside tools, for one. CrowPi does this too, in their recently released CrowPi L laptop. Both of these come with dumb “USB-C” 12 V power supplies, and neither of them should be sold to consumers, especially given that the CrowPi laptop is designed for kids and educational purposes, and Parkside tools are designed for non-tech-savvy people. When your kid burns a $500 smartphone or your granddad burns his laptop due to a $2 power supply, that’s when the gravity of this standard violation really sets in. -
they get my calif taxes