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Sab02r

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  1. I commonly request permission to use repeaters that are listed as 'open' when I first see them listed. This is partially to ensure that the owner actually intended to list it as 'open', but more just to thank the owners for making them available and let them know that their generosity is appreciated.
  2. Mine is the minus model...not the Plus. I have had it for 2 - 3 years, purchased before the Plus model was available. As WRWE456 said, it came with a pair of 3200mAh batteries. Each easily lasts me more than a couple of days. The addition of a USB-C chargeable battery makes it a nice travel companion.
  3. The KG-935G is a very good radio with many useful features. Some of my likes include: Scan groups. This allows you to program a group of repeaters for your home area, and other groups of repeaters or channels along your route of travel, or around your destination. I can preprogram the radio so that when I am in Dallas, I can select and monitor my Dallas scan group. When I am in Denver, I can select and monitor my Denver scan group. If my route takes me through Albuquerque, I can select and monitor my 'querque scan group while I am there...without having to download to the radio. This is the reason having a 999 channel memory is also useful. The 935G accepts Wouxan's USB-C rechargeable 1A26KG-8 battery. I had to order this battery separately, but I like not having to carry a charger for the radio. I can charge the 935G with the same cable I use to charge my phone. The 935G is CHIRP compatible. Wouxan does offer their own programming software, and I have no doubt that it works just fine, but CHIRP compatibility means that I can copy and paste repeater channels from other non-Wouxan CHIRP compatible radios without having to hop between software applications (or load new software on my PC). Another feature I like on the 935G is the channel knob. Not a big deal, but when you use a radio with up/down arrows, or direct entry only, you notice the absence. The one dislike I have of the 935G is that it can only scan one band at a time. Wouxan does offer at least one radio that can scan two bands simultaneously. I think it is the KG-UV9GX, which also has the scan group feature. This would allow you to monitor two scan groups simultaneously if scanning is important to you.
  4. You are free to skip threads you do not find particularly interesting or beneficial. No offense intended.
  5. There is nothing wrong with running a 20watt unit. My 20watt mobile units serve me just fine, especially when traveling in a caravan or as a loose-knit group. My 50watt base unit may or may not expand the range at which I can reliably reach those mobile units, as there are impediments, limitations, and points of diminishing returns with all things physical and electrical. but it does have many features that make it handy to use as a base unit (such as scan groups) that my mobile units do not necessarily have...and if I am paying more for those extra features that extra wattage doesn't hurt my feelings any.
  6. Hey, I just watched your review last night! Great job! Not to turn this into a Pecron commercial, but the E1500LFP, big brother of the E600LFP has an integrated 120VAC charger so no need to carry around a charging brick. I put an E1500 on order (largely due to the price), and if it performs well I may add an E600LFP...or maybe the EP3000 expansion battery. Thanks for the helpful review!
  7. That is an awesome setup! If only the EV manufacturers could figure out how to do something like that...like they told us they would. I love the radio shed idea as well. I've been contemplating something similar to maintain the charge in several lead-acid batteries I have on hand...which is ultimately what lead me to consider solar generators for their advancements, efficiency, portability and flexibility. I considered assembling a few LifePo battery banks to charge in something like your radio shed with fixed solar panels, and then move from the work truck to the camper to the office or to the house in the event of a power outage. With so many options from Anker, Bluetti, Ecoflow, Pecron and others, I doubt I could put together anything as efficient or as effective as they offer. Great information, everyone! You've all given me much to think about. Much appreciated!
  8. Thanks guys, Impressive ingenuity and preps!
  9. The thread on a "grid-down" cross-country communication relay got me thinking about methods of powering a base station during a power outage. Is anyone running a UPS or other battery, power station, or solar generator for their comms gear, such as this Pecron E1500LFP? PECRON E1500LFP Expandable Power Station 2200W 1536Wh I am not hyping this or any particular unit, just wondering if others are using something like this for their base station...plus I have long been thinking about getting a solar gen for the RV that could also run the fridge or freezer temporarily during a power outage.
  10. For the OP, Radioditty DB25-G with a Midland MXTA26 antenna and a Breedlove #940 angled stake pocket NMO mount works great. The DB25-G has a couple of peculiarities related to scanning, but as a simplex or duplex radio it works great.
  11. I like my Tram 1486 antenna...but mine is roof-mounted. Perhaps the longer Comet GP-6NC or GP-9NC might be a better use of your dedicated tower.
  12. I would suggest buying a couple of different brands of cheaper (more affordable) radios to start with and learn how to program them through software and keypad and read the manuals to understand the features of each. You will learn that some features are more useful to you than others, and some radios are more user-friendly than others. The first radio I bought; I fell in love with. The second radio I bought made me realize that there were features (scanlists in my case) that make a radio more broadly useful to a particular type of use...illustrating that my first choice wasn't the best choice for me. Once you know how you will use the radio, and what features are most-useful to you...then its time move up to bigger, badder, spendier models with huge antennas requiring bigger. badder and even more-spendier coax.
  13. +1 for Tram 1486. Mine was easy to trim to a 1.1 SWR and seems to work just fine for simplex and repeater communication within my line of sight. I used this inexpensive Winegard roof mount from Home Depot: https://www.homedepot.com/p/Winegard-J-Pipe-Antenna-Mount-DS-3000/204701091
  14. Yeah, I use mine. I don't enable alerts but I do program the Wx channels at the very top end of the memory channel list and set them to skip so that I don't have to hear them on every scan but can still easily navigate to them when I want. That came in handy last week in the mountains to let me know that a particular route was temporarily closed, then last weekend to let me know how hot and miserable I was going to be cleaning up brush by the pond...then again this weekend to let me know I was going to get wet while camping. Until you asked, I didn't realize how often I used them.
  15. I assumed the explosion of popularity was due to a carefully crafted marketing campaign by the CCP in order to spy on Americans using Boofwang UV5Rs... ...or simply "some people" enjoying humorous youtube videos during covid lockdowns.
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