WRWH433 Posted February 23 Report Share Posted February 23 Quick question for you guys who have been doing this longer than me. There are 2 repeaters in my area on the same frequency. One of them has input and output tones, and the other one doesn't. I'd like to be able to use them both depending on where I am in the area. Can you generally set up two different repeater channels? One with the input/output tones, and one without? Thanks in advance! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRUU653 Posted February 23 Report Share Posted February 23 9 minutes ago, WRWH433 said: Quick question for you guys who have been doing this longer than me. There are 2 repeaters in my area on the same frequency. One of them has input and output tones, and the other one doesn't. I'd like to be able to use them both depending on where I am in the area. Can you generally set up two different repeater channels? One with the input/output tones, and one without? Thanks in advance! Yes. Also if you leave the RX tones off on your setting for the one with tones you'll hear both as well as any simplex. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 KAF6045 Posted February 24 Report Share Posted February 24 Note that if one repeater is NOT USING an INPUT tone -- it will respond to any signal on the frequency, whether that signal has a tone or not. In that situation, setting one channel with the input tone of the other repeater, but leaving the output tone empty, will result in one's radio basically receiving whichever repeater has the stronger signal (FM "capture effect"). WRUU653 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRKC935 Posted February 24 Report Share Posted February 24 OK, there is NO WAY that can work. If there are TWO repeaters in the same area, and one doesn't have any input PL tone on it, that repeater would come up every time the other repeater was keyed up if the user could be heard by both repeaters. And if both repeaters could be heard by the user, their radio would howl and have very poor receive audio due to the frequency difference (slight mismatch) between the two repeaters. Now one of them might not have a TX PL tone. That is completely possible. But the receive PL would be required on both and both would need to be different to keep both repeaters from transmitting when someone keyed them up. gortex2 and WRUU653 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRUU653 Posted February 24 Report Share Posted February 24 9 hours ago, WRKC935 said: OK, there is NO WAY that can work. If there are TWO repeaters in the same area, and one doesn't have any input PL tone on it, that repeater would come up every time the other repeater was keyed up if the user could be heard by both repeaters. And if both repeaters could be heard by the user, their radio would howl and have very poor receive audio due to the frequency difference (slight mismatch) between the two repeaters. Now one of them might not have a TX PL tone. That is completely possible. But the receive PL would be required on both and both would need to be different to keep both repeaters from transmitting when someone keyed them up. I agree with what you are saying here but... 17 hours ago, WRWH433 said: I'd like to be able to use them both depending on where I am in the area and maybe I misunderstood but I thought he was saying he wanted to program both in his radio (just the same channel/frequency with different settings) so depending on where he was and which one was in range he could have both programed to use. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRWH433 Posted February 24 Author Report Share Posted February 24 WRUU653 is correct. These 2 repeaters don't overlap, so I would essentially be using one in certain parts of my area, and the other in other parts of my area. I'd like to be able to have them both programmed on my radio, so I can hit one when i'm in range of it, and the other when i'm in range of it without having to make changes every time. Am I understanding KAF6045 correctly in that the one with no input or output tones would accept any tones, so I could program according to the one that DOES require input and output tones and still be able to use the one that doesn't because it's accepts any and all? That would be perfect if it's that simple. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRUU653 Posted February 24 Report Share Posted February 24 (edited) 54 minutes ago, WRWH433 said: Am I understanding KAF6045 correctly in that the one with no input or output tones would accept any tones, so I could program according to the one that DOES require input and output tones and still be able to use the one that doesn't because it's accepts any and all? Almost, Think of your radios set TX tone as a key to open the repeaters RX tone (the lock if you will) if the repeater doesn’t have a tone set then it’s already open to the frequency regardless and with no RX set on your radio you are open to all that is on that frequency. So leave the RX tone off on your radio. Edited February 24 by WRUU653 Correction Sshannon 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRWH433 Posted February 24 Author Report Share Posted February 24 Ok. So, the repeater that has no tones set doesn't need a TX from me. The repeater that DOES doesn't need me to have an RX set. So by setting a TX tone and NOT setting an RX tone, I can use both when I am in range of either or. Correct? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 Sshannon Posted February 24 Report Share Posted February 24 2 minutes ago, WRWH433 said: Ok. So, the repeater that has no tones set doesn't need a TX from me. The repeater that DOES doesn't need me to have an RX set. So by setting a TX tone and NOT setting an RX tone, I can use both when I am in range of either or. Correct? The repeater that doesn't require an input tone will repeat everything it hears on its input frequency. The repeater that requires an input tone will only repeat those things that it hears which include the correct tone. So, if you transmit using the input tone for the repeater that requires tones, and if you are within range of both, both repeaters will retransmit your transmission. WRUU653 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRKC935 Posted February 24 Report Share Posted February 24 OK, program your radio for the input PL of the one repeater that does need it and do NOT program a RX PL in your radio on that channel. It will hear BOTH repeaters. Both repeaters will hear it because you will be transmitting the correct PL for the one that needs it and the other one doesn't care about the PL. It's just gonna receive anything on the frequency regardless of the PL being used. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRWH433 Posted February 27 Author Report Share Posted February 27 Thanks everyone! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Question
WRWH433
Quick question for you guys who have been doing this longer than me.
There are 2 repeaters in my area on the same frequency.
One of them has input and output tones, and the other one doesn't.
I'd like to be able to use them both depending on where I am in the area.
Can you generally set up two different repeater channels?
One with the input/output tones, and one without?
Thanks in advance!
Link to comment
Share on other sites
10 answers to this question
Recommended Posts
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.