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BoxCar

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Everything posted by BoxCar

  1. There are several computer-based radio log book programs however, they are all targeted to hams.
  2. It'll be fixed in 5 minutes. (That's after they find the problem.)
  3. The main point will be to keep short bends out of the cable body and use some sort of boot or strengthening at the connectors. If your are truly worried, use an ultra-flex cable but you still need to protect the connector ends.
  4. That is like asking which radio is best. It depends on what's desired and what's needed. As you are the first in your area, you'll want an antenna that gives the best coverage over the area. That's why many use a DB for its radiation patterns, gain and reliability.
  5. I'm truly sad you had a bad experience with some hams. Try the local club for additional help and assistance on getting a license if you are still interested. The club president is Anthony Casciato and his contact is (414) 550-0444, email is KX3H.radio at gmail.
  6. Getting wet is probably the reason. Depending on where and how it got wet may have left debris inside or you didn't wait long enough for the radio to fully dry. Leaving the radio in a warm (100+) temperature for 48 - 72 hours would help ensure water was gone.
  7. BoxCar

    Wrvq441

    You can also fix a metal plate to the fiberglass roof that's about one foot on each side through glue or bolts and use it. You can also drill through the plate to have the coax inside the cab. The ground plane for the antenna does not need to be connected to the body.
  8. Without a written opinion from the FCC the use of a Part 90 radio in Part 95 is strictly conjecture and should be evaluated as a personal opinion only.
  9. That's what we need here, more enginears, injuneers, engineerz, - well, you get what I mean.
  10. You can put the same entries into channels 20 - 22 freeing 28-30 for other entries but you wouldn't have names unless you can change the default name.
  11. Radio Reference is a site I barely used in 10 years doing Part 90.20 and 90.35 frequency work. A lot of the info on the site is available elsewhere but not as organized. If you want to know what frequencies are licensed for a particular agency, it is a good resource as some have multiple FRNs they use. Is it worth the money? That's something only a user could answer.
  12. As a great number of new users are joining every week with the same questions about tones and programming for repeaters, would it be possible to create a FAQ section with answers for these questions? More FAQs can be created for other common questions as needed if new users could be directed to that section.

  13. you can't change or set an offset on FRS channels and the repeater channels are fixed at +5 MHz.
  14. You can also use a J-Pole as it has an integral ground plane.
  15. I ask how much are they willing to pay me for carrying their advertising.
  16. There's a difference in your scenarios than what you originally posted. In your scenarios he is not using the repeater to carry on a conservation with another party but attempting to contact the "proper" authority.
  17. So, taking your comment further about using someone else's property, you think you have the right to use anything you wish until a "proper authority" tells you otherwise. Your attitude regarding this is disturbing to me and probably many others as well. Just because a repeater is up and you find the codes needed to use it doesn't give you the right to use it. That attitude could be seen as theft of services as you do not have a right to access the system. With only a few channels set aside for repeaters and published codes that could be set, unlocking any repeater is possible. You could also scan the airwaves around you and unlock WiFi systems and use their Internet connection or the codes necessary to access someone's home systems. Your attitude about what is yours and your rights regarding electronic communications needs some serious reconsideration.
  18. While there is truth to the argument that increased power increases range, I have found that to not always be true in the real world. The range is governed by the antenna height because of the distance to the horizon. UHF doesn't follow the terrain so increased power nets out as increased coverage within the effective coverage area determined by the antenna type and height.
  19. Uncle Yoda, If you want a definitive answer on fixed stations, ask the people that wrote the rule. The Wireless Bureau answers email enquiries every day and the answer is free. The key piece is that fixed stations are stations that are not used for normal communications in the GMR service. If a unit does more than communicate to more than one station the class of the station changes to either a base or control station. It's really very simple.
  20. Fixed stations in the Part 95 service are limited to analog transmission but that doesn't hold true in other parts of the regulations. Part 101, microwave, is now almost exclusively digital and those are fixed stations. Within Part 90 fixed stations are a mix of analog and digital. So, the statement that fixed stations only communicate with other fixed stations covers both types of emission.
  21. Setting a squelch tail is the primary method used on the repeaters in my area. You hit transmit on your radio for a second and release. If you here a noise immediately after you know you triggered the repeater.
  22. Wimp. I've gone out and started my car at -42 so I could drive to work.
  23. How are you programming the radio? Are you using a program in a computer or through the radio keyboard?
  24. BINGO!!!! If a fixed station communicates to anything other than a fixed station the station class just changed.
  25. The definition is clear IMO. A fixed station is at a location that doesn't move and only communicates to another station that doesn't move either. Think of a microwave site. The dish only communicates to another dish some distance away. Neither end moves.
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