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AdmiralCochrane

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Posts posted by AdmiralCochrane

  1.  

    You are correct, a GMRS only would be about 19 inches, but the EdFong is a dual band, and is about 5' long when placed in PVC pipe, including the 12 lead area for clamping. Even at 5' it's very manageable inside and reasonable at $34+ shipping. You can always use fishing line to hang it in a window and it should work well.

     

    Yes using the calculator linked, I see the same length ~19"

     

    That the antenna mentioned is dual band explains the extra length; I didn't see that in the original mention.  I think Ed makes single band antennas too, so without the dual band mention, I didn't know why a longer one was mentioned. 

  2. These answers don't directly answer my question.   65cm (the wavelength of the GMRS band) is ~25 inches.   A half wave antenna would be ~12 inches.  My home made Slim JIM (which gives me swr's below 1.17) is about 19 inches overall including the lower loop.  Wouldn't a properly tuned J pole for GMRS will be about the same size? 

  3. I use VirtualBox on MacOS to run any radio configuration software that does not run natively on the Mac, which is most vendor supplied, and have no issues whatsoever.  It might be a bit of a challenge getting VirtualBox set up the first time. But, from then on it is a snap. The biggest problem is getting a copy of Windoze.

     

    Or, use CHIRP. Runs fine on MacOS and AFAIK works with all Baofengs.  Even if your particular model is not listed, there is almost always a similar model that will work.

     

    I use Chirp for all my other Baofengs, but there isn't a  Chirp version for the Mini 

  4. CCR's are the free samples of crack of the radio world.  I bought a 70cm Baofeng Mini when they were on sale for about $10 shipped not realizing to get it programmed the way I wanted it would cost more for the programming cable than I paid for the radio. Then the programming software wouldn't run on my Mac and I had to program it from the Dell laptop I use at work. I have several of the local 70cm repeaters programmed into it but have never had the opertunity to try it close enough to hit any of them.  It does receive if you are line of sight to the towers at least 5 miles away, I have done that with it; its almost worth the $10 for that alone.

  5. This is *exactly* why I have GMRS.  There's no way my XYL will get her ham ticket, so I needed something in between to communicate with her.

     

    In fact, I have an HT programmed for her to have with her during inclement weather.  Three times this year, we've lost cell service at either home or her work (I WFH), and we've had major road closures and other problems - it starts listening to a small section of the upper 440 band, with a few, "Channels", and transmits on GMRS.  Why?  Because as a ham, I can put up a much more larger antenna and use a lot more than 50W of power to reach her and receive her signal.

    Ditto

  6. If you're looking at enough space to stick up a JPole, then I'd go for something like a Diamond X50C2.  The lack of needing a ground plane is pretty meh for a permanent install, though your point about an N connector is actually a fairly big deal on UHF - I use N over UHF whenever possible.  Also, yeah, LMR400 will cost way more ... heck, decent terminations for it are $15 each, and I think I spend about $1.50/foot for bulk from TMS

     

     

    TerraWave TWS-400 has the same rated db loss and moisture resistance for about 80 cents per foot from The Antenna Farm.  They cut custom lengths and will put whatever connectors you want (or none) on either or both ends at a reasonalbe price. 
  7. Companders are what make cell phones sound like 'regular' phones and not the cheap wireless junk that was first on the market.  In olden times, you could tell when someone was on a wire at home or holding a cordless. Back in the stone-age of cell phones, Fujitsu was the first handheld using a compander.  People where shocked when they called my number and discovered I was on a cell because the voice quality didn't give it away.

     

    Yeah, I rode dinosaurs too.

  8. After my wife figured out I had the com cable driver and Midland software on different ports, I got my MXT400 programed as I want it.   Confirmed you can program the blank channels to something new and that the radio recieves 70cm HAM just fine if you program it to receive it.  I have 8-14 programed to monitor nearby 70cm repeaters as a convenience. 

     

    When I first turned my radio on after programming and went thru the channels with the dial or hit scan, it only went up to 22, but when I pressed the up button on the mic, it went all the way thru all 30 channels and now always sees the repeater channels. May have needed to be cycled on and off again or something like that.

     

    Still waiting on 65 ft of LMR 400 to do my permenant antenna mount above my roof line. 

  9. It took  me several tries, but Facebook finally showed me the posts from mid-May.  It really was a lot to search thru the way Facebook presents itself to my browser and computer.  My wife almost always sees things a day ahead of me, even when I click most recent. 

    Thanks again for the help (and the picky details).

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