-
Posts
440 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
6
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Gallery
Classifieds
Everything posted by amaff
-
Appreciate it. It's obviously not a massive issue. It's just an odd thing I noticed, and wasn't sure if it was just me.
-
I was poking around in my profile trying to find some settings to mess with and noticed this: Except that's not my callsign. The website shows it Correctly: Given, near as I can tell, they're the same account (I didn't have to do another registration for the forum, I just had to use my myGMRS login to log in to the forum....wtf? Doesn't look like I can edit it even if I wanted to, to correct it.
-
-
I think you're looking at Channel Spacing (which is, for whatever reason, bandwidth). 12.5 is narrow, 25K is wide. Step size I think can go down to 2.5K.
-
Try lowering the step size.
-
Clearly that's how it should be. But with the way this thing's set up...
-
TidRadio TD-H3 nothing heard for 2 seconds after transmit
amaff replied to SkyNet's question in Technical Discussion
Odd. I'm not seeing that on any of mine (FW 240401). Haven't heard of this being an issue on them either -
in before someone runs down that FCC ID to make sure it's legit
-
No worries, just sharing what was shared with me that worked. But it'd be nice if it was in the original post instead of having the next person have to stumble across it buried in the thread
-
100% that. That's why I'm curious if it'll let him transmit on the interstitials if he puts them somewhere other than those 8-14 memory slots.
-
It's not the same type of cable as the DB20-G. That's an RJ-45 connector. This one is a DIN connector of some flavor. The CPS for the DB20 is a little clunky. The main 'trick' is to use the ">>" buttons for practically everything instead of trying to do it in the spreadsheet, IMO
-
I don't know if this changed in later versions (I bought mine this year, so it's bee a few years now), or maybe it's something specific on the Radioddity DB20-G I have (tho these are supposedly fairly identical) but there's a step missing here you may want to consider updating for other johnny come lately noobs like me, since the "manual" gives F-all direction on how you should expect to do this. If you are programming in a channel in VFO mode on the radio, once you get to this step, using the Up and Down buttons won't do *anything* until you press the MON button. And thanks to the legend on the FB Anytone 779UV group that got me pointed in the right direction. The MON button will cycle through what type of tones you want (CTS / Custom CTS / DCS). And then once you're in the list you want to use, you can use the Up / Down buttons to cycle through the various tones / options (or presumably do a non-standard one if you need to, but I haven't played with that at all). But if you try and do this without that step, you'll just keep getting the "F-U" tone
-
I feel like we're talking past each other. A mobile GMRS radio should never transmit on the interstitial frequencies, *no matter what memory slot they're in*. They can (and should) comply with that by enforcing the rules on those frequencies no matter where in the radio's memory they are. You can 100% comply with the FCC's rules while not arbitrarily blocking out those memory slots. Lots of radios do it.
-
You can have a radio that works right out of the box (like the aforementioned 905G), but that also allows you to do more or less what you want while following the rules. Just for fun, and to illustrate: I have a repeater channel in memory slot 9, a low power channel in memory slot 11, and a normal 5W GMRS channel in 11. Given Sven's experience, it'd be interesting to know if it allows transmitting on those frequencies, so long as they're not in one of the magical memory spots. Probably not. But it'd be funny
-
You can transmit on those channels with a handheld, but there are restrictions on power level and bandwidth. The radio doesn't care what memory slot I put those frequencies into, it'll obey the rules. And if I put a frequency that allows 5 watts in memory slot, say, 8, it uses high power. Like Sven said, it's arbitrarily blocking off *memory slots* 8-14, no matter what's actually in those memory slots. You definitely can't transmit on 467.5625 / Ch8 on a GMRS Mobile. But you can't transmit on that frequency whether or not you put it in memory channel 1 or 499. There's not something magical about *memory slots* 8-14. It's the actual frequencies that matter. If wants to put a repeater frequency in one of those memory slots, it not allowing transmit because "it's 8-14" is lazy programming.
-
Yeah I get that. Radioddity and Wouxun's software is the same. Super annoying. Once it's done, it's done. And it's still easier than doing it all by hand on the face of the radio. But it could so easily be so much better.
-
Like I said, lazy programming. But yeah if you can just skip memory slots 8-14 and do whatever you want (within The Rules) on the rest of them, seems like it's fairly easily ignorable
-
A whole lot of GMRS radios are *extremely* lazily programmed, and heavy-handed in how they allow you to customize them. Other than a couple Wouxun KG-905Gs (which allowed me to program them however I wanted, but enforce the rules on what frequencies can get what power / bandwidth), all my other stuff is unlocked, and I manually program them to the rules so that all my stuff matches and is, technically, more or less, compliant. Even my mobile (DB20-G)... It shouldn't care what frequency you put in a particular memory slot (IE: If you want to program a repeater on memory slot 8, then you should be able to). But plenty of radios really don't like those first 22 (or 30) slots being messed with. The RT95 (Anytone 778) and DB20G (Anytone 779) can, but a quick google unfortunately doesn't come up with much for unlocking or jailbreaking the RA87. And those are 'only' 25 and 20 watt radios, respectively.
-
TX won't matter on a simplex channel (unless you're trying to talk to someone who's listening for that tone). But yes, unless they're transmitting the tone you put on the RX side, your radio just won't open the speaker, essentially. You can look at it and see that it's receiving, but it won't make it through the radio to the speaker.
-
That. The only thing that changes for a repeater is *your* transmit frequency (IE: the frequency the repeater is listening on). But it's re-transmitting on your receive frequency. If you don't want to hear 'em, you can put a Rx CTS or DCS tone on your radio on those channels (same way if you have a repeater programmed on one of those channels, you won't hear simplex traffic on that channel unless they are using the same tone as the repeater)
-
Hilarious. I guess your generation was just born with that knowledge
-
I think the point being made there is that whether it's on the repeater channel on 22 (call it RPT22 if you wish) or on 'normal' 22, he's getting blown out by static. Which makes sense... the Rx doesn't change on the radio b/w those 2. Have you tried turning the squelch setting all the way up? It's an SOC radio so it probably won't change much, but it's worth a shot. What's the "other" radio you've tried? It may have better filtering on the front end to avoid getting blown out by whatever's causing that interference.
-
You can REALLY dial in how annoying you want to be with these
-
You can hear them listening to an open repeater (or even simplex) channel, on 15 thru 22. Then it's a matter of how good your radio's tone scanner is, and if they talk enough for it to figure out what the right tone is. Or you may have a local club w/ that info posted somewhere. As an example, there's a *bunch* of repeaters in Northern Utah that aren't on myGMRS, but they're all listed on the local group's FB page.