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Rebuilding the Chain O' Lakes Repeater - Ingleside IL


coryb27

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Due to the duplexer failing I decided over the winter months I would rebuild the Chain O' Lakes repeater in Ingleside IL. I had a spare 100W MTR2000 in the garage and decided this was going to be the heart of the new machine. Tuning it down to 50W would insure a solid 100% duty cycle and provide years of service. Due to past bad experiences with EBay duplexers I decided to purchase a new one and settled on an EMR 4 cavity pass / reject with a factory tune. Being a tinkerer that loves to build things I decided to dig out all the radio junk and see what I could come up with. The finished system will have an on board Bird 43 SWR / power meter and one of those micro mobile UHF radios for testing , monitoring and local use. To limit loss and interference I plumbed the entire system with ¼ helix superflex trimmed to critical lengths. Over the past several months I was having issues with another systme on .550 so come spring it will be moving to .725. I am still waiting on a few more items to finish this build and will keep this thread updated.

 

http://cor3com.com/mygmrs/fr.jpg

 

http://cor3com.com/mygmrs/emr.jpg


1710.jpg

 

 

This is the tower at my site, 150' with a DB420 on the top.

 

http://cor3com.com/mygmrs/tower.jpg

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We used to have 2 repeaters at the site. The Yagi ran a Motorola R100, you could get into it 48 miles away at the house. It has since been taken down and replaced with a side arm and station master running a friends Ham repeater.

wow what a relic.

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Can't beat that MTR for solid performance, I run one with a Zetron and a ASP fiberglass antenna (800 model I think) 22 feet long on my 50 foot tower, which is on a hill 150 feet above average terrain. It has always provided good range. Before the MTR, I had 2 mobiles running, it was good, the MTR is the real deal though. For duplexing I run 2 receive cans, and one transmit can, stuff salvaged out of an old Motorola community repeater. Works great. 

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I wish I had a nice tower for my future repeater. Alas, I'm stuck with a tripod roof mounted antenna at about 42'. It still should be good enough to cover the roughly 10 mile radius I need for now.

n4gix. don't feel bad, we are doing a similar setup, eave mount at 15' and a 30 foot channel master pipe with a 6dbd/9dbi Comet antenna. We get 15 miles mobile for the most part and we have lots of hills and gullys in the way.

 

If I had that 150 foot monster I would rule the world ;)

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Well, your county maybe. That is one fine and professionally built repeater Cory is building! B)

Well thanks William, I think it turned out OK. I try do build all my gear as good as I can using the best parts I have on hand of can afford. I am sure the 1/4 helix jumpers are overkill but way better then 90% shielded coax... I know its made a difference on my commercial repeaters so it can hurt the GMRS ones.

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1/4 " is definitely not overkill. most of the stuff I do uses 1/2" superflex, beats  using 213/400 cables.

 

I used some 1/2 on the amplifier output on my commercial Mototrbo system but mostly 1/4 for jumpers etc... Pic's included.

 

kr1.jpgkr5.jpgkr6.jpg

 

Second rack to the left of mine is the National Weather Service radio for our area.

 

kr3.jpg

 

Everybody loves an equipment shelter pic!

 

kr4.jpg

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