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maddogrecurve

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Posts posted by maddogrecurve

  1. On 5/25/2021 at 3:24 PM, serrasalmus said:

    ive got a guy i talk to that has the nagoya 771c nmo and he gets great range, now we do live in a mountainous area so the repeaters are usually pretty high. that being said im using the nagoya mag mount that they recommend with the kg1000g and its a banger also. with mine we went wheeling this weekend and it held up great to the trees. two good choices in my book.

    how much u charge me to bring me some of them there wonder branches you be talking bout! I miss bbqing with raw mesquite logs instead of this chip bs im stuck with now......

    I bought the 771 and my SWR is astronomical!!!  He must have trimmed it..

  2. On 6/30/2021 at 12:02 AM, WyoJoe said:

    Often there are tones in use, but they are not listed so you have to contact the repeater owner to get them. This is normally done in conjunction with getting permission to use the repeater. On some repeaters, they may use so-called "travel tones" which basically means CTCSS 141.3. These repeaters are usually open and available to people traveling through the area, hence the term "travel tone."

    The owner told me that I have to program the 5khz offset, which I think I did, so I will try it on my way home, but I don't know how I will know if I reach the repeater or not.  My programming cable has not worked on this radio so I have never had it hooked up to my PC yet...Ugggghhhh..

  3. 35 minutes ago, wayoverthere said:

    If my memory serves me, you want REPT21 (as @WyoJoe said, it's probably programmed in channel 29) for that one.  Repeater output frequencies are the same as the simplex channels, with the input frequencies 5mHz higher, and the REPTXX channels in your radio should be pre-programmed to account for that.  REPT21 should receive on 462.700, and transmit on 467.700 (the repeater's input frequency).

    on tones, i believe the menu item  you want will be called T-CTC (aka PL or CTCSS) or T-DCS (aka DPL or DCS),  depending which type the repeater is using.  if it's expressed in hz, it's CTCSS/PL; if it's a 3 digit number, or 3 digits followd by I or N, it's DCS/DPL.

    Thank you very much!  I will contact the repeater owner and see what he says.  He has no codes/tones listed.

  4. 1 hour ago, WyoJoe said:

    You probably need to access the repeater from a different channel than Channel 14. Channel 14 is one of the interstitial channels and not a repeater channel. On most of the repeater capable radios I'm familiar with, the repeater channels are usually set up for channels 23-30, inclusive. I suspect you would want to use channel 29 (on my radios that is the default channel for a "700" repeater (467.700 input, 462.700 output), with the appropriate tones for the repeater programmed into that channel.

    I have a UV-82 which is very similar to your V-1 radio. The CTCSS xmit tone can be changed using menu option 13 on my UV-82. It may be the same on your model, but I don't know for sure. You may need to enter a CTCSS tone on transmit to open the squelch on the repeater. The repeater information should provide the necessary tone frequency if you need one.

     

    Thank you for the answer!  There are no tones listed on the repeater.  Maybe I am missing something?

  5. Good Evening,

     

    I am new to GMRS, and have the B-tech GMRS V-1 radio, I have a local open repeater here in Portland but I do not know how to hit it.  It has an input and output frequency and the channel that I hear the repeaters' automated message is the output frequency, the input frequency is not aligning with my channel 14 which is 467.712.  The input frequency of the repeater is 467.700.

    The output frequency  is 462.700, can someone please help me?

     

    Thanks

     

    wrmQ982

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