TNFrank Posted yesterday at 04:20 PM Author Report Posted yesterday at 04:20 PM Not sure what CCS7 is. I understand DMR and P25. Also, another question, will I be able to RX P25 channels? Quote
Lscott Posted yesterday at 06:31 PM Report Posted yesterday at 06:31 PM 1 hour ago, TNFrank said: Not sure what CCS7 is. That's the type of ID used for P25 digital voice mode. 1 hour ago, TNFrank said: Also, another question, will I be able to RX P25 channels? Not without a real P25 radio, or a hot spot with the P25 protocol built in. Note P25 radios are expensive. Some used radios people have them priced like Gold Bricks, and IMHO they are way over priced. You can buy really nice used DMR and NXDN radios far cheaper than the P25 stuff. For example this is a section of Kenwoods 2024 catalog. Look at the cost to add P25 conventional verses DMR conventional to one of their top tier NX5000 HT's. Note they come out of the box enabled already for NXDN. https://comms.kenwood.com/special/nx_5000/common/pdf/nx_5000_brochure_2016.pdf The price is shocking to say the least. Other manufactures will rape you just as bad. P25 radios are expensive, I'm guessing,for a couple of reasons. One it's a requirement for many emergency communications systems, and its used by just about every government agency. Second, and I don''t know if it's still true or not, but there were/are government grants to cover some of the cost of the equipment. Of course as soon as the government starts handing out money the prices go up because the manufactures figure the end buyer isn't footing the whole bill so the cost, to them out of pocket, isn't as big of a deal. Quote
TNFrank Posted yesterday at 07:47 PM Author Report Posted yesterday at 07:47 PM The only reason I'm interested in P25 is to RX LEO/EMS frequencies to keep track of what's going on same as I monitor DPS on NFM. You'd be surprised at all the stuff going on on the roadways. Quote
SteveShannon Posted yesterday at 08:32 PM Report Posted yesterday at 08:32 PM 44 minutes ago, TNFrank said: The only reason I'm interested in P25 is to RX LEO/EMS frequencies to keep track of what's going on same as I monitor DPS on NFM. You'd be surprised at all the stuff going on on the roadways. Some scanners receive P25. Quote
Lscott Posted yesterday at 08:40 PM Report Posted yesterday at 08:40 PM 41 minutes ago, TNFrank said: The only reason I'm interested in P25 is to RX LEO/EMS frequencies to keep track of what's going on same as I monitor DPS on NFM. You'd be surprised at all the stuff going on on the roadways. First before investing in any kind of radio for P25 monitoring, particularly for public safety, you want to make sure it's not encrypted. If it is you're hosed. You won't find any way to break the encryption normally used. Second it's not a trunked system. Some radios will NOT scan trunking systems unless they are registered/affiliated. That's can't happen without the system administrator of the system authorizing your radio on it, which likely 99.999% of the time won't happen. There are some ways to do what is called a "non affiliated" scan. It usually means some way to spoof the radio to think it's really on the trunking system. I have a buddy who managed to do that with some XTS2500's on 700/800 MHz to monitor his local PD. He's lucky they don't encrypt. It's usually the first item above that spoils the idea of monitoring. SteveShannon and Northcutt114 2 Quote
Lscott Posted yesterday at 08:41 PM Report Posted yesterday at 08:41 PM 8 minutes ago, SteveShannon said: Some scanners receive P25. Quote
Northcutt114 Posted 22 hours ago Report Posted 22 hours ago 5 hours ago, TNFrank said: The only reason I'm interested in P25 is to RX LEO/EMS frequencies to keep track of what's going on same as I monitor DPS on NFM. You'd be surprised at all the stuff going on on the roadways. I don't know whereabouts you are in Arizona, but the majority of major metropolitan police forces are encrypting their radio traffic. I'd check before I spent any money on a radio to scan. Quote
Northcutt114 Posted 22 hours ago Report Posted 22 hours ago 4 hours ago, Lscott said: First before investing in any kind of radio for P25 monitoring, particularly for public safety, you want to make sure it's not encrypted. If it is you're hosed. You won't find any way to break the encryption normally used. It's usually the first item above that spoils the idea of monitoring. Yup, this ^. SteveShannon 1 Quote
TNFrank Posted 20 hours ago Author Report Posted 20 hours ago Dept. of Public Safety(aka Highway Patrol)still uses FM Narrow band. I have 4 channels locally I can listen to, East, West, South, and Central. EMS and Rural Metro Fire are also NFM. Not everyone has gone P25. I got my radio today so, let the fun begin. SteveShannon 1 Quote
TNFrank Posted 18 hours ago Author Report Posted 18 hours ago Ok, so the CPS isn't reading the radio. I tried my chipped cable(which I'm told isn't going to work with a digital radio) and the factory supplied cable. I installed the drivers for the standard USB programming cable but the odd thing is that the CPS doesn't give me the option of a COM Port to pick from. Normally I use COM5 but there's no picking the COM port so I just get an error message and can't connect to the radio. The cable IS pushed in all the way and short of unplugging everything usb from my computer I have no clue as to what to do. Any ideas? Quote
TNFrank Posted 17 hours ago Author Report Posted 17 hours ago Well, the radio is going back to Amazon. I'm not going to try to fight with it to get it to work with the CPS. I've tried a couple different cables, installed drivers, did everything I could think of including trying other CPS programs but it just won't read. If I can't read it I can't program it. I'm going to go with my first choice, the RT-4D and see if that'll work. If it doesn't then it'll go back too. Quote
WRYS709 Posted 16 hours ago Report Posted 16 hours ago 2 hours ago, TNFrank said: Ok, so the CPS isn't reading the radio. I tried my chipped cable(which I'm told isn't going to work with a digital radio) and the factory supplied cable. I installed the drivers for the standard USB programming cable but the odd thing is that the CPS doesn't give me the option of a COM Port to pick from. Normally I use COM5 but there's no picking the COM port so I just get an error message and can't connect to the radio. The cable IS pushed in all the way and short of unplugging everything usb from my computer I have no clue as to what to do. Any ideas? [deleted; see below] Quote
WRYS709 Posted 16 hours ago Report Posted 16 hours ago 1 hour ago, TNFrank said: Well, the radio is going back to Amazon. I'm not going to try to fight with it to get it to work with the CPS. I've tried a couple different cables, installed drivers, did everything I could think of including trying other CPS programs but it just won't read. If I can't read it I can't program it. I'm going to go with my first choice, the RT-4D and see if that'll work. If it doesn't then it'll go back too. I had 0 problems with programming my DM-1701 for the brief time I owned it. Link for me the CPS that you are using. How did you find it? Was it included in the box; I suspect not. What computer do you use? Which flavor of Windows? If you get this frustrated with programming, working with DMR programming will not get better. With all due respect, you need to take a few deep breathes, relax and give it more than 2 hours for help to arrive! SteveShannon and Northcutt114 2 Quote
TNFrank Posted 9 hours ago Author Report Posted 9 hours ago I downloaded the CPS from the Baofeng website. The issue isn't the computer or my operating system. The CPS doesn't allow a COM Port to be picked so it can't connect with the radio. I've had no problems programming my other radios so that wouldn't be an issue either. I enjoy setting up radios and have spent hours doing so. You've got to be able to connect to the radio to do anything and without that you're dead in the water. I loaded the CPS for the RT-4D, opened it and can select COM5 so I'll be able to connect to it when it gets here. I'm not doing any Firmware upgrades or switching to Open GD77, I'll run what came on the radio and be happy with it. Quote
WRYS709 Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago 3 hours ago, TNFrank said: I downloaded the CPS from the Baofeng website. The issue isn't the computer or my operating system. The CPS doesn't allow a COM Port to be picked so it can't connect with the radio. I've had no problems programming my other radios so that wouldn't be an issue either. I enjoy setting up radios and have spent hours doing so. You've got to be able to connect to the radio to do anything and without that you're dead in the water. I loaded the CPS for the RT-4D, opened it and can select COM5 so I'll be able to connect to it when it gets here. I'm not doing any Firmware upgrades or switching to Open GD77, I'll run what came on the radio and be happy with it. The DM-1701 programming cable is chipless; the chip is in the radio. Did you have the cable connected to both the computer and the radio AND the radio turned on when you installed the driver and checked Device Manager for the COM?? Quote
TNFrank Posted 4 hours ago Author Report Posted 4 hours ago And the factory, chipless cable didn't work either even with the drivers installed. Again, the issue was not being able to choose a COM port to point the CPS to in order to find the radio. This isn't my first rodeo, I've programmed dozens of radios so I know how to connect the cable and make sure the radio is on. Quote
SteveShannon Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago 56 minutes ago, TNFrank said: And the factory, chipless cable didn't work either even with the drivers installed. Again, the issue was not being able to choose a COM port to point the CPS to in order to find the radio. This isn't my first rodeo, I've programmed dozens of radios so I know how to connect the cable and make sure the radio is on. Does Device Manager show the addition of a comm port when you plug in the chip cable or connect the non-chipset cable to the radio? Quote
TNFrank Posted 3 hours ago Author Report Posted 3 hours ago 5 minutes ago, SteveShannon said: Does Device Manager show the addition of a comm port when you plug in the chip cable or connect the non-chipset cable to the radio? GNU/Linux doesn't use a Device Manager. The programming cable has always shown up at COM Port 5. Works every time with every CPS I've used. I've got CPS's for AR/UV-5RM, K61, BF-F8HP Pro, Yaesu FT-65r, BTech 20v2 and the Radtel RT-900 and RT-4D. CHIRP also works on COM5 for the UV-5R, UV-82 and Talkpod A36 Plus. Like I said, I know what I'm doing, it's the CPS/Radio that's the issue and it's not just me having the problem. Google "DM-1701 CPS not connecting to the radio." and see how many others are having the same problem. Quote
SteveShannon Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago 1 minute ago, TNFrank said: GNU/Linux doesn't use a Device Manager Ahh, thanks. I thought you were on windows. Are most of the people having issues connecting to dm1701 radios using Linux? Quote
TNFrank Posted 3 hours ago Author Report Posted 3 hours ago Just now, SteveShannon said: Ahh, thanks. I thought you were on windows. Not for the last 13+ years and before that it was an iMac for 10 years. The last Windoze system I used for any length of time was Win98. Quote
SteveShannon Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago 2 minutes ago, TNFrank said: Like I said, I know what I'm doing, it's the CPS/Radio that's the issue and it's not just me having the problem. Google "DM-1701 CPS not connecting to the radio." and see how many others are having the same problem. My asking you a simple question should not be seen as a challenge to you personally. OffRoaderX 1 Quote
TNFrank Posted 3 hours ago Author Report Posted 3 hours ago 7 minutes ago, SteveShannon said: My asking you a simple question should not be seen as a challenge to you personally. I didn't take it as such. It's just many assume that everyone runs Windows. If folks would read their EULA they'd never install it on their system because you're basically giving MicroSoft total control of your computer to add or delete any software that they want. I've been very happy with MX-Linux 23.3 which is a Debian Stable based op system (same as the ISS uses)with the KDE desktop environment so it's not only light weight(less than 500 Meg to run) but it's also highly customizable so you can make it look and feel just the way you want it to be. Quote
tweiss3 Posted 3 hours ago Report Posted 3 hours ago Many of these cheep chinese radios and their software/drivers barely work on the intended system (windows), let alone a fast pace changing debian core. You may be out of luck if you have no access to windows. SteveShannon and WRUU653 2 Quote
WRYS709 Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago 40 minutes ago, TNFrank said: Not for the last 13+ years and before that it was an iMac for 10 years. The last Windoze system I used for any length of time was Win98. That’s interesting. I always run Windows in Parallels on my Mac(s), Bootcamp before that and SoftWindows when it was PPC before Intel. I did not mean to mislead you by recommending the DM-1701, but I have no experience with Linux What was your last iMac OS X; Snow Leopard? Quote
WRYS709 Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago 48 minutes ago, TNFrank said: I didn't take it as such... I think some members here did not read your recent post where you indicated you have autism. I recognized your "style" of response immediately and was not offended by it, considering your history... TNFrank 1 Quote
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