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WRQX963

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Posts posted by WRQX963

  1. This question probably applies to all the KG805s and other higher end Wouxons but I am asking it specifically about the KG805F. The programming software lists several features but they are not discussed at all in the online manual. I am excited about each of my future units to self ID upon key up.
    1. Each channel - Optional Signal: off/DTMF
    2. ANI-ID Switch: yes/no
    3. Call Ring: yes/no
    4. ANI-ID Roger: yes/no
    5. PTT-ID: off, 1-10
    6. ANI-ID Code: 000-999
    7. Ring Time: off, 1-10
    8. Mode Switch: 000000-999999

  2. 50 minutes ago, MichaelLAX said:

    I was first licensed as a Novice in 1961 and have continuously held my license up to Amateur Extra (back in the old Morse Code days) since then. 

    My comment was intended for some “insiders” here and…

    The sideways laughing emoticon tells the uninitiated that this is a joke!

    So my comments have a little place here.

    Very little! ?

    OK, I did nor recognize your sarcasm...de Ai4i

  3. On 10/28/2022 at 8:25 AM, Lscott said:

    Interesting comment.

    I think those channels could be put to better use IMHO. In another thread there is a suggestion to use those interstitial channels for the addition of digital voice mode. Using a narrow enough digital signal overlap with the "official" 20KHz adjacent GMRS main channels could be reduce to less than the current 11KHz narrow FRS FM, or eliminated. There are some digital voice modes that only use 4KHz bandwidth and would fit in without overlapping the GMRS main channels. Might even run at much higher power too, like at least 5 watts, the limit for hand held GMRS radios.

    I believe that the digital PMR allowance across the pond does it well. It is inevitable that eventually, every transmitted RF voice signal will be digital, but as an interim step, make all new GMRS radios with the option of transmitting 20F3 or 11F3 by simple programming, most already do, and announce that in X number of years, everyone will need to narrow their footprints.

  4. Whenever my wife and I go out shopping, we stay on channels 8-14 because
    1. 500mw should last all day
    2. Even throughout the local shopping mall, we are both nearly full quieting from one end to the other.
    3. Radio school taught me to always use the minimum power necessary and the untrained are forced to do this on 8-14,
    so there is less chance of bumping into other traffic.

  5. 1 hour ago, Lscott said:

    Here is a real question. Who makes a practical and affordable FHSS repeater? I did a search and didn't really find much of anything. If the radios are only usable for short range communications because there is no infrastructure to expand the range sort of takes the shine off the attraction to FHSS radios as a general communication tool.  

    Trunking systems require multiple repeaters and associated hardware with master controllers, not single trunking repeaters.
    Large hypothetical trunking systems with several hundred clients could only be installed by the Motorolas and GEs of the world,
    but I think that both GSM and CDMA (or an even newer system) are more efficient..

  6. THANKS...I found the ten-channel expandability in the software too, though I have no radios yet, so I was not aware that it would actually work. I suspect that Motorola will change that "flaw" eventually, either for all existing units, for newer ones, or will update that software with some extra bells and whistles but only six channels. Sounds like FHSS is the way to go, but will we be saying the same thing in a few years about 2.4GHz or 5GHZ compared to 900MHz? Whoever suspected that we would be walking around with phones on those bands with hidden antennæ?

  7. 1 hour ago, MichaelLAX said:

    With all due respect, Joel, your statement is only one word away from a classic anti-semitic Trope.

    I did not mean it that way, but the powerhouse FM stations would have nothing to do with a system that placed them on an even playing field with graveyard channel AMs plus left room for plenty of new competition. IBOC allows extra stations to exist but only under the control of the big FM stations. NPR stations have benefitted the most by the technology because they can have news-talk on their main channels plus classical, jazz, or folk on their sub-channels. Regulatory agencies are supposed to regulate but they are not above corruption and bribery. It is plain and clear that if the "powers that be" had not been strongly opposed to DAB+, we would have it.

  8. On 6/18/2022 at 2:17 PM, MichaelLAX said:

    ...the FCC wanted a system that was compatible with existing FM analog radios; whereas DAB and DAB+ are not.

    Pull out your pyramid chart of who controls whom with the bankers on top and the workers being crushed by everyone else.
    The NAB wanted a system that would preserve the relative stick values of their member stations: nothing more, nothing less.

  9. On 6/15/2022 at 7:53 PM, OffRoaderX said:

    ...however I don't know what a QSO is.

    Hi Randy, it was your video that persuaded me to try the GM-N1 as soon as the commission posted my callsign, and I ❤️ it.
    The circuitry also filters out the low mid-range such as from wind noise and car horns and my wife and I use it all the time, usually on the shared simplex channels.
    I hope that you are enjoying this QSO right now as much as I am ?❗

  10. 12 hours ago, jwilkers said:

    Frs had 14 channels and .5 watts from day one. Just some early radios only had a limited number of channels.
    Frs never allowed more than half a watt...until the recent rule change.

    You may be correct, I have found conflicting information from various websites.
    The first sentence in number two below is all messed up:
    https://midlandusa.com/blogs/blog/6-things-you-should-know-about-fcc-changes-for-frs-and-gmrs-radios

  11. 8 hours ago, MichaelLAX said:

    I do not think that is an accurate statement: In the US; perhaps your statement is a hoped-for request.
    As trademarked and patented by iBiquity, HD-FM  and its sub channels requires additional HDR chipsets to function.

    All my recent cars have had IBOC receivers and I hope that they will be promoted more in the future.
    Of course, the rest of the world has opted for a much better technology, DAB+.

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