Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

I live in southeast Michigan.  I had my Radioddity G30, hand held out on the back porch to just listen.  I listened to two people just 25 miles south of the Mackinaw bridge which is 300+ miles from me.  Today I heard two people talking from Indiana, and two others from Cleveland.  Are they somehow jumping from repeater to repeater?  I'm sure someone has a answer to quell my curiosity.

Thanks for helping me understand...

 

Posted

Maybe.  Some repeaters have been linked, so it’s possible that’s what you’re hearing, but it’s also possible that you’re receiving them directly via a phenomena called tropospheric ducting, which can cause UHF signals to travel farther than normal distances.

Posted

Are you sure you were listening on GMRS frequencies? Could the radio have been set to pick up 70cm amateur? It's a lot more common to find repeater networks in the amateur bands. It still happens in GMRS despite the FCC clarification. But if you were picking up 70cm amateur it would be less surprising.

Posted
1 hour ago, dosw said:

Are you sure you were listening on GMRS frequencies? Could the radio have been set to pick up 70cm amateur? It's a lot more common to find repeater networks in the amateur bands. It still happens in GMRS despite the FCC clarification. But if you were picking up 70cm amateur it would be less surprising.

The Radioddity G30 is a GMRS Radio 

Posted
1 hour ago, dosw said:

Are you sure you were listening on GMRS frequencies? Could the radio have been set to pick up 70cm amateur?

GMRS repeaters are going to have the same coverage area and range as 70cm repeaters when antenna height and locations are equal.

We get 30-35 mile radius of coverage with our GMRS repeater antennas at 400 feet and  35-40 mile radius of coverage with our 70cm antennas at 900 feet. Both are on the same tower. And both 70cm and GMRS has the same dead spots when one is mobile.

Posted

I was on GMRS.  I also heard distant stations (along with local) again this morning.  I let the HT scan the gmrs channels it came with.  Thanks all for helping me make sense of this.

Posted

Tropospheric ducting is more common in spring and fall when there is bigger change in temperatures between sunrise and a few hours afterwards. I live in Central Missouri and can talk to people in Springfield Illinois on GMRS when there are good openings. The distance is between 115-120 miles.

We also occasionally will hear out of state repeaters using the same frequencies and tones come across our repeaters when conditions are just right. This happens on our 2m, 70cm, and GMRS repeaters.

Posted
15 minutes ago, WRYZ926 said:

when there are good openings. The distance is between 115-120 miles.

I know a guy here on this forum that regularly/ALWAYS gets 200+ miles on all of his radios.. He apparently does this by purchasing every radio ever made and if it does not get 200+ miles, he just throws it directly into the trash.. All of his "friends" also do the same thing, so this method obviously works.

Posted
4 minutes ago, OffRoaderX said:

I know a guy here on this forum that regularly/ALWAYS gets 200+ miles on all of his radios.. He apparently does this by purchasing every radio ever made and if it does not get 200+ miles, he just throws it directly into the trash.. All of his "friends" also do the same thing, so this method obviously works.

He is "that guy" and falls into the category of "some people".

It must be nice to have money to just throw away like that.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Guidelines.