WSJK595 Posted Thursday at 11:55 PM Report Posted Thursday at 11:55 PM How do you get permission to use a repeater Quote
Northcutt114 Posted Friday at 12:05 AM Report Posted Friday at 12:05 AM I think it largely depends upon the repeater. Most are maintained by an individual or group. Ascertain from the owners what the their terms of usage are. If it is a repeater listed here, contact information can be found by clicking on the repeater. The more, I suppose, unpopular answer is that you really don't need permission. Certainly civil behavior might imply that you should obtain it, but there's an equally salient argument that "mUh fReE aiRwAvEs" or something. SteveShannon 1 Quote
GreggInFL Posted Friday at 08:27 PM Report Posted Friday at 08:27 PM Airwaves are free but repeaters are not. Someone spent resources putting that system together. SteveShannon 1 Quote
WRXB215 Posted Friday at 08:38 PM Report Posted Friday at 08:38 PM @Northcutt114 I love your avatar. TrikeRadio and Northcutt114 1 1 Quote
Northcutt114 Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago On 8/8/2025 at 4:38 PM, WRXB215 said: @Northcutt114 I love your avatar. It seemed...I don't know? Appropriate? Quote
Northcutt114 Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago On 8/8/2025 at 4:27 PM, GreggInFL said: Airwaves are free but repeaters are not. Someone spent resources putting that system together. Agreed, but, they did so knowing that the "airwaves are free." There's a very large group in my area that is currently charging to use their repeaters. I'm wrestling with it because I understand that someone spent significant time and expense to put the repeaters up, but I also realized that GMRS, by definition, is a public service. It seems counterintuitive to me. Quote
SteveShannon Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago GMRS is not a “public service”. It is a Personal Radio Service. You’re right that people shouldn’t be making a profit from charging to use their repeaters. The regulations allow recovering expenses only. Northcutt114, WRUU653 and OffRoaderX 3 Quote
OffRoaderX Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 1 hour ago, Northcutt114 said: Agreed, but, they did so knowing that the "airwaves are free." There's a very large group in my area that is currently charging to use their repeaters. I'm wrestling with it because I understand that someone spent significant time and expense to put the repeaters up, but I also realized that GMRS, by definition, is a public service. It seems counterintuitive to me. You should teach them a lesson by putting up your own repeater and letting everyone use it. WRXB215 1 Quote
SteveShannon Posted 5 hours ago Report Posted 5 hours ago 3 minutes ago, OffRoaderX said: You should teach them a lesson by putting up your own repeater and letting everyone use it. That’l learn ‘em! WRXB215 1 Quote
Northcutt114 Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago 2 hours ago, SteveShannon said: GMRS is not a “public service”. It is a Personal Radio Service. You’re right that people shouldn’t be making a profit from charging to use their repeaters. The regulations allow recovering expenses only. Forgive me, I misspoke. You are, as I presume is usually the case, correct. To the last part of your post, I think the issue that most of the people local to this group have is that the group doesn't publish any data regarding their intake and expenses. I'm too green to know if that's a requirement or not, but they hold Thursday night nets and do them live on YouTube and their production studio looks like it would put an NFL TV trailer to shame. People wonder where all that money is coming from. Not to mention one of their senior member started an online radio sales company and advertises for it over the net every week. It's...odd, to say the least. SteveShannon 1 Quote
Northcutt114 Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago 55 minutes ago, OffRoaderX said: You should teach them a lesson by putting up your own repeater and letting everyone use it. I'm currently looking into it, actually. A few of us, actually. And we're looking at the Retevis RT97L to do the job. The problem is that they have the high ground; literally on top of a mountain on a tower. I've been around long enough to know that you're being sarcastic, but explain it to me like I'm five years old. What are the costs associated with maintaining a repeater? I know you did it for awhile. Am I naive? $600 for the RT97L, another grand, say, for a good antenna and some coax. Mount 'er on a pole and voila? Fix stuff as it breaks? I assume, for some, there might be a lease or rental for the space on a tower? That wouldn't be the case for me as a member in our group has space for it on his property and is willing to host it. Tell me, Queen of GMRS, what am I missing? Quote
OffRoaderX Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago 9 minutes ago, Northcutt114 said: I'm currently looking into it, actually. A few of us, actually. And we're looking at the Retevis RT97L to do the job. The problem is that they have the high ground; literally on top of a mountain on a tower. I've been around long enough to know that you're being sarcastic, but explain it to me like I'm five years old. What are the costs associated with maintaining a repeater? I know you did it for awhile. Am I naive? $600 for the RT97L, another grand, say, for a good antenna and some coax. Mount 'er on a pole and voila? Fix stuff as it breaks? I assume, for some, there might be a lease or rental for the space on a tower? That wouldn't be the case for me as a member in our group has space for it on his property and is willing to host it. Tell me, Queen of GMRS, what am I missing? Getting their repeater up on the tower was probably a few thousand monies to get it installed and probably several hundred to $1k - $2k per month, every month, depending on the location. That's why they charge for people to use the "free public service" which is neither free nor a public service. When I put up MY repeater, open for everyone to use for free, the cost was around $1k .. $500 for the repeater (used Vertex 7000), the coax, mast/hardware, etc and paying a professional to climb on my dangerously sloped 3-story castle-roof to install it all.. (I got the antenna for free!).. But my advantage is that I live atop a golden hillside overlooking the slums below which is almost as good of a location as the very expensive towers very near me.. not quite, but close enough, so i have decent coverage. Sticking your pole in the ground with your RT97L would work, but would not have near the reach as their tower on the mountain.. unless you are like me and have a castle atop a golden hillside. Northcutt114 1 Quote
Northcutt114 Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago 25 minutes ago, OffRoaderX said: Getting their repeater up on the tower was probably a few thousand monies to get it installed and probably several hundred to $1k - $2k per month, every month, depending on the location. That's why they charge for people to use the "free public service" which is neither free nor a public service. When I put up MY repeater, open for everyone to use for free, the cost was around $1k .. $500 for the repeater (used Vertex 7000), the coax, mast/hardware, etc and paying a professional to climb on my dangerously sloped 3-story castle-roof to install it all.. (I got the antenna for free!).. But my advantage is that I live atop a golden hillside overlooking the slums below which is almost as good of a location as the very expensive towers very near me.. not quite, but close enough, so i have decent coverage. Sticking your pole in the ground with your RT97L would work, but would not have near the reach as their tower on the mountain.. unless you are like me and have a castle atop a golden hillside. I, unfortunately or otherwise, do not have a castle atop a golden hillside. It's a split level in a depression, surrounded by foothills. I can hit their repeater to get over the hills but within the bowl, my friends and I are trying to put something up to link us all without having to simplex around the bowl, relaying messages. We wouldn't and couldn't compete with this other local group. Our thought is, though, if we can take our traffic off the mountaintop and keep it in the bowl, it's a win-win for everyone. We don't have to pay and they have more bandwidth to talk about smoking meat, going to Wally World, eating at Sonics, and talking about the good old days of CB and sending postcards. Or whatever it is they talk about. But your point is well made about the rent/lease of a repeater. I had no idea it could be that expensive. Dues, at that point, make sense. Like I said before, go easy on me. I'm new. OffRoaderX and SteveShannon 2 Quote
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