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Showing content with the highest reputation on 09/19/19 in all areas

  1. Jones

    Base Antenna

    If you're on flat land, such as near the ocean like you, then yes, a 5/8 wave antenna will give you a natural 3 dBD of gain over a quarter wave. However, in hilly terrain, or in the mountains, particularly on UHF, this is NOT a benefit, and a quarter wave antenna will give you much better omni-directionality "on the tilt', which is preferred over forward gain in these areas. There are discussions elsewhere on this site about this matter.
    1 point
  2. Oh god, I will have to put my flame suit on. Here it is. I am a licensed ham, have been for years and have pushed the state of the art in many venues. Built an amateur radio satellite station, worked the world, constructed a 98 foot tower etc. Spent a lot of money at AES. However every so often I get the bug to build a repeater. I am building a repeater for GMRS and not for ham as my immediate family will not benefit. This is something my neighbors might benefit from as we are in a hurricane area and power and communications are out at least a few days every year. So I am building a 50 watt (wide band ) GMRS repeater with quadruple receiver diversity. Yes folks I intend to push the state of the art forward. All parts will be Part 95 certified. The four receivers will each have a separate diversity antenna mounted with separation to exploit the uncorrelated multipath signals. One of the four receive antennas will be a horizontally polarized loop to exploit angle diversity. Why am I doing this? To improve the reception form a 5 watt handheld so that talk back reliability approaches talk in. The heart of this is the repeater shelf I am assembling and the brains are a surplus JPS SNV-4 voter which has DSP S/N voting and DSP noise reduction. Will it work well? I think so, that is part of the fun. Once the fun is over I will have a powerful GMRS repeater in my town.
    1 point
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