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Issues with BTech GMRS V1


RickW

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I have had a couple of BTech GMRS V1 HT's for a year and they seemed OK and work well with our Midland MXT 115's and MXT 400's. Just before the warranty ran out I noticed that one of the units had a dead battery, even though the power switch had been off. I charged it back up and noticed that over a three day period it drained the battery with the switch off. Thinking the battery was defective, I put in a warranty RMS and was just about to send it back when I got to thinking that maybe it wasn't the battery, but maybe it was somehow drawing current when off. So I set up a current flow test between the batter and rig and sure enough there was a continuous 15 ma. discharge. So I got another RMS and sent both the unit and the battery to BTech. They replaced both in short order.

 

Then I discovered that the replacement unit did not have the FM radio receive function. I actually find this useful as another use for the radio. Upon contacting BTech, they indicated that I needed to enable the function with CHIRP. I ordered the cable and it turns out that the FM function is enabled, so something else is defective. I wrote to them several times but they are not very good about responding but finally asked me to request another RMA. I tried that but by then the warranty period had run out and the system would not let me request an RMA due to being out of warranty. So I again asked them about this and they said to "edit the date on the RMA." 

 

It costs around $7 or so to mail these units to BTech and I am considering just living with the disabled FM function. Hopefully no other problems exist that I have not noticed, but it has been disappointing. 

 

I am thinking that it is possible that this replacement unit may have a physical issue with the button not engaging the internal switch that switches the FM function but I am hesitant to disassemble it.

 

Has anyone else had a problem like this?  And/or has anyone tried taking one of these units apart? 

 

Thanks for any help.

 

Rick

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I ordered 2 BTech GMRS V1 from amazon. Both were defective both were sent back. I replaced them with 2 BF-F8HP ordered from Amazon also ordered a Surecom SW-102 Meter. By metering both found one at high power at 4.3 watts and the other at 5.1 watts. This time I sent back to BTech now waiting to receive them back. But the good news is that if I get them back still not up to close to 8 watts I’m still under the 30 day return to Amazon till Jan 31 2020.

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I ordered 2 BTech GMRS V1 from amazon. Both were defective both were sent back. I replaced them with 2 BF-F8HP ordered from Amazon also ordered a Surecom SW-102 Meter. By metering both found one at high power at 4.3 watts and the other at 5.1 watts. This time I sent back to BTech now waiting to receive them back. But the good news is that if I get them back still not up to close to 8 watts I’m still under the 30 day return to Amazon till Jan 31 2020.

5.1 watt is good on UHF, they only preform at anything close to 8 watts on VHF,

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Midland, and Btech both have options in that power range.

 

You can also find Kenwood TK880H that will do 40 watts.

 

Im running a 25 watt Motorola PM400 but they make a 40 watt version of that as well.

 

Sent from my SM-G892A using Tapatalk

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I would like to buy a mobile unit for my truck that can do 30-50 watt what should I buy? The complete set up.  I'm only able to do GMRS keep in mind

Why so much power? Do you really know how much power you actually need? Blasting the airwaves with more power than you need should be avoided. Maybe a quality gain antenna properly installed and that 5.1 watt radio will do the job. anything more would just be noise for other users.

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Why so much power? Do you really know how much power you actually need? Blasting the airwaves with more power than you need should be avoided. Maybe a quality gain antenna properly installed and that 5.1 watt radio will do the job. anything more would just be noise for other users.

True. Even on my radios with 50 watt settings i rarely run that power level. I certainly dont feel "undergunned" running my 25 watt PM400. Even on that radio i typically run on "low" power which i have programed as 5 watts.

 

Sent from my SM-G892A using Tapatalk

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Agreed.  On field testing, mobile to mobile, bumping the power from 5 watts to 50 watts only netted an additional 1/4 mile.  That's it. 

 

The only time I can see any benefit to boosting power is in a flat-out life or death emergency and you are trying to increase the odds of someone/anyone hearing you.  And even then, if your in a bad spot, it wont matter how much power you're running.

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Yep, Marc is right. Unfortunately my experience with more power is even bleaker than Marc's experience, b/c for me, going from 5 to 50 on GMRS netted zero additional miles, yep, you heard that right: nada, zip, zero.... which pretty much proves what Marc's post stated: "If your in a bad spot, it won't matter how much power you're running."

 

May I ask what is it that you're trying to do? A Base to Mobile? Base to Portable? Mobile to Portable? Portable to Portable?

 

Also, for whatever is worth, as a former Baofeng addict, always running on Baofeng budgets, etc, always mesmerized by their fancy color screens and pretty LEDs, etc; I had to get out of that trend of thought and buy higher quality (with no color screens, nor fancy and useless bells and whistles) commercial grade Vertex Standard radios, which draw rings around the BTech stuff where it matters: in the RF performance department... with tighter receivers (key factor) that won't desense in high RF environments, which nowadays is pretty much anywhere near a city larger than 500 souls population....

 

G.

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In my experience, boosting power from 4W handheld to 40W mobile increases the distance 2-3 times. From 0.5-1 miles to 2-5 miles. My guess is that it has a lot to do with terrain. My real life use is in the Sierra Nevada foothills, in the canyons, with a very little vegetation. 65cm waves seem to reflect quite well from the rocky surface. Power boost makes the reflected waves go further. My real life example is in Pinnacles National Park, where I can easily contact HT-to-Mobile between the East side and West side. Over the air distance is is about 2 miles. This is not possible with HT-to-HT.

In fact, TK-880H (40W) parked at the West parking lot hears pretty much from all the Pinnacles (spare the caves) and can reach HTs at the same distance (40W rules!).

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In my experience, boosting power from 4W handheld to 40W mobile increases the distance 2-3 times. From 0.5-1 miles to 2-5 miles. My guess is that it has a lot to do with terrain. My real life use is in the Sierra Nevada foothills, in the canyons, with a very little vegetation. 65cm waves seem to reflect quite well from the rocky surface. Power boost makes the reflected waves go further. My real life example is in Pinnacles National Park, where I can easily contact HT-to-Mobile between the East side and West side. Over the air distance is is about 2 miles. This is not possible with HT-to-HT.

In fact, TK-880H (40W) parked at the West parking lot hears pretty much from all the Pinnacles (spare the caves) and can reach HTs at the same distance (40W rules!).

This.probably has more to do with the antenna advantage mobiles have over HTs than the power boost.

 

Sent from my SM-G892A using Tapatalk

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Agreed.  HT antennas use your body as a counterpoise.

 

I'll start a new thread about this so I don't completely derail this one.

That's true on vhf and below, and with miniature radios on uhf. But a TK-380 for example is 5-1/4 inches long with an aluminum chassis, so that's very close to a full quarterwave counterpoise. In fact since it has a large cross-sectional area, it probably has enough bandwidth to actually be a full quarterwave electrically.

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  • 3 months later...

I had a Btech GMRS-V1 for little over a year. It started heating up with power switched off. I swapped the battery, but the problem persisted. It was out of warranty, so I bought second GMRS-V1.  If the new one has similar problems, I'll look for a different brand GMRS HT.

 

Yesterday, I attached a counterpoise to the Btech HT. I want to see if I can use a repeater that has been out of range. I have a Nagoya NA-771R on the Btech, which works well with the other 3 repeaters in Seattle.  GMRS is used by the Seattle Emergency Communications Hubs for hub-to-hub communications.  In a pinch, I can use a 3-element UHF Yagi antenna with the Btech to reach the most distant repeater.

 

I have a Baofeng UV-82HP HT with a counterpoise to reach amateur radio repeaters throughout Seattle/King County. The counterpoise makes a noticeable difference.  In a pinch, I can hook up with a flexible J-pole antenna.

 

73

John WRBK742, KI7YRA

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In fact since it has a large cross-sectional area, it probably has enough bandwidth to actually be a full quarterwave electrically.

I built a 1/4 wave ground plane antenna using some stiff bus wire and a PCB style BNC connector after doing some simulations with EZNEC to check the bandwidth. The elements were just soldered on. The bandwidth I achieved was 430 to 470 MHz with an SWR of 1.6 or less. The SWR dropped to around 1.1 or so around 450 MHz. I wanted a cheap antenna to use at the Dayton Hamvention good for Ham and GMRS/FRS. I mounted it on top of a baseball cap while keeping the power at 1 watt or less. The elements were only 6 inches long and held it on top using a zip tie through the fabric. Worked far better than the rubber duck antenna with the radio hanging on my belt because the antenna was up in the clear.

 

I tried several of those clip-on type antennas where you use an HT antenna on them and clipped to a hat etc. I see a lot of people using them. None were worth the effort that I tried. Really poor match when I checked them.

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