
WRFP399
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Everything posted by WRFP399
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Yeah. I was able to connect off to 175 hub. It was transmitting traffic coming over the node from 175 but I couldn't talk back. The guys on the net were excited to see Alaska but I couldn't key up when they called.
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Ummm? Did I set this up right? Is it working? I think I got it connected to the Mountain Hub (177) When it connects to the Hub I can hear it telling me that Hub is connected to the Node but I don't hear anything further like "Transceive" or whatever. Should I?
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Alaska GMRS Users or Networks
WRFP399 replied to dogfarts2021's topic in National and Regional GMRS Nets
If you are up in Wasilla the ER repeater can't hear you due to Mt.Baldy. It blocks the signal. Think of the coverage circle on the map as more of a Semi Circle. I attached a Nautel Radio Coverage Map that is fairly accurate. If GMRS had more of a formalized user group up here I am sure we could arrange to get a repeater at one of the wide area sites like Mt. Baldy, Site Summit, or Grubstake Mountain. -
Lets keeps this in perspective. Midland's radios are marketed towards your basic user who wants to talk between their kids while at a park and/or for off roaders who want to talk between machines. The people on this board are "more advanced" users of GMRS in general w/ things like repeaters and linked nets. Midland isn't marketed at us.
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I just wanted to put this out there. I have had at least one RT97 working here in Alaska for about a year and half now. It's outdoors and exposed to the weather on a 2000 foot ridge line. (think -30 degrees F lows during cold snaps and high winds in the 50-70mph range during wind storms). I am sure some of you have seen the posts. I had one "break" on me. It still worked fine as far as RX and TX but one day I couldn't get it to communicate with a computer for updated programming anymore. I sent Retevis a message, they attempted to work through the issue with me for a few emails and then requested I send it back. Yes, their english was not exactly 'correct' but it was fluent enough for easy communication. Yes I paid my own shipping to get it back to China, which cost me 70 bucks, but it got there. They had it for about a month and just sent me another one back. All in all they stood by their product. They don't just ghost you after purchase.
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Petitioning to get a few VHF frequencies added to GMRS
WRFP399 replied to a topic in FCC Rules Discussion
GMRS was built specifically so people didn't have to worry about band propagation. GMRS was essentially created to be "plug and play". Turn on, select channel, push button, talk, done. -
Petitioning to get a few VHF frequencies added to GMRS
WRFP399 replied to a topic in FCC Rules Discussion
Does anyone know if the Retevis RT97 really is type accepted? If it is it clearly come equipped from the factory to be run out of a standard 12 volt power source, ie a "cigarette lighter". Just playing devil's advocate. -
Fun topic - SHTF communications plans and equipment?
WRFP399 replied to Lscott's topic in Miscellaneous Topics
This here is important. Sometimes just letting the kids have a radio while they drive their power wheels around gives them some good familization. My wife learned basic radio use while back country hiking. Cell service drops quick here so radios allow simplex use between hiking party members and some popular areas are covered by repeaters so that gives some duplex familization. -
Fun topic - SHTF communications plans and equipment?
WRFP399 replied to Lscott's topic in Miscellaneous Topics
My plan involves nothing more than Cellular Voice for primary communication with Wifi/Cellular Data for Alternate Use. GMRS for Contingency and 2M/70CM HAM for Emergency Use to supplement my GMRS as the 2M mountain top repeaters were are **WIDE** coverage and have backup power. We are talking 4000+ plus feet AGL. My plan involves communication for the "local" area which is around 30 miles. This is easily accomplished with my solar recharged Retevis RT97 on a mountainside. Now family and friends just pick up and turn on a HT. Due to geography here it works well. . Most of this was fueled by the Cellular net becoming overloaded during our Earthquake in 2018. That illustrated a real world need for local comms between family and friends. I don't really care about extreme long range comms through HF as we are so cut off here it doesn't really matter to me. If the world got to a point where our comms were down for so long that the only way to reach outside of Alaska is HF I have so many other more important things to deal with than speaking with the lower 48. Push come to shove, there are enough HAM's here that I could just find one. Solar is what I obviously chose for these low power needs. -
That high ground you're looking at will give you great coverage. Basically if you can see it, you can hit it with your radio. I have an RT97 on a mountainside here in Alaska. Its putting out around 5 watts. It's about 2000 AGL and so far I have talked into it from 31 miles away with no issues, but that was with good line of site. I also just was using it at 17.5 miles with no line of sight when hiking last month. Heavy obstructions, 5 watts from my Vertex VX-231. Height really is king.
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Why make this hard on yourself? Just get an RT97 GMRS repeater, place it up high somewhere. If you want cheap and simple radios to hand out, use Retevis RT-22 radios. Done.
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Even if the RG8x was cutting him down to 25 watts that's still a fair amount of power and should push out further....unless we are talking really bad topography.
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What I heard on a three day road trip... (not much)
WRFP399 replied to WRHS218's topic in General Discussion
I found that an HT in a car without an external antenna suffers greatly. That same HT with a simple 1/4 wave mag mount pulls in far more signals and pushes out much further. I have been scanning the FRS channels, 1-14 here in Anchorage Alaska and hear a fair amount. Just today in my 30 min ride home I heard car to car communication, flaggers, kids in apartment buildings talking about a class and school mates, construction crews working on large buildings, a business warning it's employees about a bear near the porta-johns... -
I see this is a bit old but in case the OP checks back: I would second the RT97. I have one running on a mountain side here in Alaska and get 25-30 miles of coverage to HT. An RT97 setup at your centrally located house with an antenna put up above roof level would work wonders for you. If simplex is working from one side to the other at ground level, having the repeater in the middle sounds like it would give you exactly what you are looking. There doesn't appear to be a need to place a repeater antenna 6 million miles in the air. A few feet above the roof of your home sounds like it would be more than enough to accomplish the goal you're trying to accomplish. I would be willing to bet that the RT97 set on low power and some HTs set on low power would set you up nice. Advantage to low power use is much extended battery life on the HTs and having the option to push to high power if you find an area with spotty coverage. The RT97 is weather sealed and small so you can place it very close to the antenna and not worry about loss from long coax runs. Something as simple as the RT97 feeding a mobile antenna with a ground plane kit via some RG400 would work just fine. Are their better setups out there...for sure...but this works well for what it is. There is no need to over complicate the system for some cases. RT97 https://www.retevis.com/rt97-portable-repeater-power-amplifier-uhf/#A9150A Ground Plane Kit https://www.amazon.com/TRAM-1465-Mobile-Ground-Plane/dp/B004PGMFGM/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=tram+ground+plane+kit&qid=1627330792&sr=8-1 Simple Antenna (I have one and works well, the cutting guide that comes with is accurate) https://www.amazon.com/Browning-450MHz-470MHz-3dBd-Mobile-Antenna/dp/B00IDTJ2EA/ref=sr_1_2?dchild=1&keywords=browning+uhf&qid=1627330865&sr=8-2 RG400 Cable in various lengths https://www.ebay.com/itm/132890965676?hash=item1ef0eb36ac:g:QWgAAOSwaPNcFyCP
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He is asking does the BE stop working all together after it shuts down indicating that it could be the fuse that is blown....but if I understand what you are saying is that the BE works just fine unless you put it under a heavy load, at which point it "stops working" and you can only listen, indicating that the BE still is supplying power, but maybe just not enough.
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So I have an RT97 setup that is running Solar. It's hooked up to a 50 and 30 watt panel. The 50 watt panel is a Renogy. I forget what the 30 watt is (Zamp?). I have a cheap PWM solar controller feeding into a 35 amp hour SLA battery and also acting as the battery protection circuit. Here is a link to the controller. https://www.huinetech.com/products/10a-20a-huine-pwm-waterproof-solar-charge-controller-12v-24v-compatible-for-solar-system I have had zero CONFIRMED issued with noise from this setup but today, around 10:00am I had something pushing RFI in on the input frequency of 467.625. The repeater would push it back out everytime you would key up a radio and send the DCS codes. It appeard the RFI would then keep the repeater open for a few seconds to several minutes at a time. I checked with others in the repeater service area and they had the same experience. I monitored the input frequency from my home but heard no RFI. Granted the repeater is in a much better location for reception than I. If you were close enough or had enough power you could take over the RFI and it would just be heard in the background of your transmission. About a half hour later, gone. Everything working just fine. Here is a small video clip. Note how it doesn't start until I key the radio. It faded away and stopped about 10 seconds later. Edit: it's 8 PM and it's back to doing it again. 20210722_101150_2.mp4
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Anyone have tips for getting the online audio for the net working? I can't hear the feed.
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Man, I wish I could get away with such a small panel....up here I had a 28 watt panel on mine but during the winter it was unable to keep up. I just added a 50 watt panel in parallel and tripled the battery size. Here is a photo in it's "beta 2.0" phase. The 50 watt panel faces due south, the 28 watt panel faces SW to catch the setting sun, which often drops below the cloud cover. The RT 97 is strapped the back of the panel via some alum angle.
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Honestly I found my export versions on CE I use for my VX-261 and VX-231s online...I don't even remember where. It did take a lot of google searching though.
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Anyone have an experience with the front end on the Retevis RT97? Does anyone make a GMRS Bandpass filter with SMA connectors. Right now I have a high pass filter added in after the duplexer that starts attenuation in the low 400mhz range. I would love to try a bandpass for the heck of it. While the unit works fine when set to "high power" I can always hear it further than I can get into it unless I am pushing significantly more power from my PM400 mobile radio. When set to "low power" it about matches a 5 watt HT. A 5 watt HT can get back to the RT97 with about the same signal clarity that the RT97 can get to the HT. No idea what actual power the RT97 puts out on High and Low power. Just wondering if I am getting some desense from strong RF in the area. I have multiple FM radio and TV broadcast stations with in a few miles. Would be nice to get further improvement if possible...or should I leave well enough alone?
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I have it posted here in our repeater listings. I will gladly grant access to other GMRS users here in ANC. My hope is to expand the user base but I don't want it abused either as it's all paid for out of my own pocket. I think the real HD communication will be done by the HAMS on their VHF repeaters at Flat Top Mountain, Mt. Gordon Lyon, and Grubstake Mountain....granted I don't know what their power systems are like but my understanding is Grubstake is so "remote" its self-contained using Solar and Diesel.
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The never-ending Part 90/95 debate, and my discussion with the FCC
WRFP399 replied to a topic in FCC Rules Discussion
So...if I dumb this all down, the FCC essentially said use your Part 90 gear, we don't care as long as you don't cause problems? Honestly, people using Part 90 gear are far less likely to cause problems than our Blister Pack friends. -
So here is my real world experience with emergency communication during an emergency, or rather lack of communication. In 2018 we had a 7.1 quake here in Alaska. It didn't cause massive damage but we did have power outages for 4-12 hours, infrastructure damage closing a few roads and breaking a few water mains. A few buildings collapsed as well. Gas lines went undamaged as far as I know. It happened just as everyone was either getting to or was at work. I was at home with our 2 year old. My wife was in the "city" which is about 20 min from us. I did not have a second car at the time. It was November so not too cold but still below freezing. I have a small gen set able to power up a few basic circuits and the gas furnace. The cell grid became overloaded and useless almost immediately. Calls did not work and text messages took hours. The internet was slow but still running if you had power to keep your modem/router on. I was unable to check on family and friends. Luckily our old and failing sea port held up otherwise we would be talking about a much different story. That is when I started looking into a way to set up a radio network that would cover my whole area but was user friendly. Yeah there are HAM repeaters set up on the mountains around here with elevations of 4500 feet and super wide coverage but most of my family and friends aren't interested in tested licenses. So I got a Retevis RT97 repeater tuned for GMRS, a SLA battery, a charge controller, a solar panel and a simple N9TAX antenna. I hiked up a mountain and set it around 2000 feet overlooking the entire area I wanted to cover. I now can easily get my family and friends on board. Most have radios at this point. Most have simple HT radios and as long as they are not standing in a deep hole with heavy obstructions around they can reach into the small repeater just fine out to around 25 miles. Those with mobile radios and better antennas can reach into it from basically anywhere in the city regardless of obstructions. So a single GMRS repeater works well for us due to our geography. I am not trying to communicate with people hours or days away. It may not work for everyone but it works for us. I have also thought about the whole extended grid down resulting in supply shortages and safety concerns. In something like that you need to try and isolate yourself, physically but I also programmed in "emergency"/"SHTF" frequencies into the repeater which are just outside of the GMRS band and in the LMR business realm. Things like a 462.525 and 467.750 split. These frequencies are un-used locally. If the world ends, I can switch over to them and at least prevent all the FRS/GMRS crowd from listening in so easy.
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If you look for the international version of CE you will be allowed to open up to wideband.