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amaff reacted to a post in a topic: Fixed Station vs Base Station?
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Speaking of which, why do we park on the driveway and drive on the parkway?
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Baofeng GM-15 PRO program ANI.ID numbers?
WRXB215 replied to WRWU395's question in Technical Discussion
In the software, click on "Phone System" on the left. In the "Phone System" screen that comes up, edit the "Radio ID Code" on the right. -
WRXB215 reacted to a post in a topic: Well that was a surprise
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The219 reacted to a post in a topic: Fixed Station vs Base Station?
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The219 reacted to a post in a topic: Fixed Station vs Base Station?
- Today
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WSID588 joined the community
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I have received 16 TD H3s. I bought 14 and 2 were bad and they sent me 2 more. I don't use chirp. The TD H3 has it's own CPS that works well and is similar to the way chirp works. So use the H3 CPS. Have you tried to update the firmware to revitalize the "broken" H3s? You can even install the same firmware and overwrite the existing.
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srwong41 joined the community
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I’m beginning to think so too
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marcspaz reacted to a post in a topic: Base station cannot use repeaters
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marcspaz reacted to a post in a topic: Fixed Station vs Base Station?
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And people tell me I’m nuts when I say h3s stink. Every one I know that has fell for them has a 50-75% fail rate. Vote me down all you want guys. This is just more evidence h3 radios are total junk.
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: Fixed Station vs Base Station?
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: Well that was a surprise
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WRUU653 reacted to a post in a topic: Base station cannot use repeaters
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And….now the two tdh3’s that took the place of the prior two that didn’t transmit now have the exact same problem. I think Chirp is bricking them somehow. They worked great for about 2 weeks and now zero output wattage. I’ve done nothing to them other than fiddle around chirp programming channels and repeaters. Resetting the radios did nothing. Wow. Stumped beyond belief. I’ve got two uv5g’s, 1 uv5g plus, and had 5 tdh3’s and out of 5 tdh3’s 4 of them have went to zero output wattage on my surecom meter after previously showing 3.7 watts. Gosh I hope I can sort this out. It’s not the meter because none of these tdh3’s will open local repeaters and they used to.
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No. You seem to be joking / playing dumb. A car that is stopped is still mobile. One I always wondered about is my car, parked at home - is that mobile enough? Or do I have to drive up and down the driveway while transmitting?
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No microwave frequencies in GMRS. And data as far as I know is limited to handheld and short duration transmissions. The official response made no mention of any special transmission modes.
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Base station cannot use repeaters
AdmiralCochrane replied to UncleYoda's topic in FCC Rules Discussion
BINGO -
As has been stated many times on this forum, it's all about how the transmitter is being used. Two stationary units only exchange signals between themselves. They are not used to contact repeaters or mobile stations nor; do they contact other base stations that communicate to either other base or mobile stations. Perhaps the best example of a fixed station communicating to another fixed station are microwave links. they don't contact repeaters or any mobile or other base stations. they only talk to one other station at a fixed location.
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krazeekirk joined the community
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I used the term stationary to differentiate between a unit that doesn't move as opposed to a mobile unit that moves. Nobody argues about mobile, regardless of how it moves. But stationary (not moving) seems to be confusing. Seems pretty simple. A stationary unit( not moving communicating with another stationary unit ( not moving) both units are fixed. If a stationary unit communicates with a mobile unit it's then a base. Do I understand correctly.
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DB20-G, GMRS mode, with ch. 39 programmed for simplex, ch 39 can be programmed from the mic for 467 mains with or without tone
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LeoG started following Base station cannot use repeaters and Surecom sr112 on a retevis rt97s?
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Maybe he's setting it up by himself like I did. Not everyone has people available when they need them to talk on the radio. I myself used a digital voice recorder which only activates when a sound is made. Used an app on my phone. I didn't get a response but I would go to places that I needed it to work and transmitted where I was and if it got recorded I knew that was a good test. If not, more work to be done or just don't use it there.
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If you are a non mobile station that communicates with another non mobile station that is a fixed station. As soon as that fixed station communicates with a mobile unit it becomes a base station in definition. And as soon as that same fixed/base station communicates with a repeater it is by definition a control station. The only one that seems to have limitations is when you operate a fixed to fixed station where you can't exceed 15 watts. Sounds like a specialty unit that has an antenna pointed at another antenna to communicate specifically with that station. Most likely LOS on towers so 15 watts would be more than adequate to maintain good quality communications.
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Certainly not Michael Jackson....
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- Yesterday
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Stationary unit is not a defined term. Station at a fixed location is the language used. Base stations traditionally fill that role for routine usage. Fixed station still does not have enough defined parameters to clearly distinguish it except who you talk to. It's a bad way to write regulations but it is all we got. For your "stationary unit" term, are you including a parked car? a person with a handheld who sits in a chair?
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Giving it to GMRS doesn't really solve anything except the question of what to do with it, but it doesn't really make sense to create a new class of license for that band. I suspect that if it were given to GMRS, users would divide up into "VHF GMRS" and "UHF GMRS" folks depending upon their needs or whims. And, of course, the occasional oddball would "need" to have two radios just because. Yes, repeaters would be expensive to build and maintain, but 6m AM simplex would be great for some things, especially with 50-100 watts. A lot of folks who now need a repeater to talk to the spouse unit from office to home could probably just go to 6m simplex. Farms and ranches that now use repeaters might be able to get rid of them. The easiest solution for the FCC would be to set some basic rules, toss it into the GMRS category, and say, "You figure it out. Or don't. Whatever."
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I won't be showing my wife the invoice for my 80' tower when I finally get it.
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Maybe I am too green to understand, but it doesn't seem all that complicated based on stations talk to mobile units. Fixed stations talk to stationary units that by virtue of being stationary are fixed stations.
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New Member Check-In
WSDV406 replied to SteveGibbs's topic in South Central Tennessee GMRS's Club Forum Page
Welcome Seth! I'll start monitoring Murfreesboro a little more. I can RX it, but don't think i come through on TX.....not until I get my antenna up on the outside of the house. Same with Lebanon for me. I can communicate clearly through Brentwood and Grasslands though. -
Why don’t you just turn it on and try and talk to it? If your using gmrs you obviously have friends and family you can talk with to test out the repeater. This is another solution looking for a problem that is very easily solved by trying to use the repeater. I mean grab a couple hts and go for a Drive. I have a feeling this is another repeater that isn’t needed.
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Because they don’t want the general public on a personal repeater. I work several ranches throughout the week local and in other states. They very active repeaters for ranch or farm business. None of them want the general public using the repeaters. So please do not list something that is not yours. Why would you even want to. What activities are you doing with your family or friends that requires you to want to list strangers private repeaters. WHY IS THIS EVEN A QUESTION. what would this even cross some ones mi d. Gmrs is MORE than repeaters.