WSCB609 Posted April 25 Report Share Posted April 25 You would think as old as radio is, these would be standardized by now. Also, is D423 the same as D423N ? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 kidphc Posted April 25 Report Share Posted April 25 Simple answer yes.You encode a transmission and decode on reception. Is a simple way of thinking of it.Sent from my SM-S901U using Tapatalk WRUU653 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WSCB609 Posted April 25 Author Report Share Posted April 25 9 minutes ago, kidphc said: Simple answer yes. You encode a transmission and decode on reception. Is a simple way of thinking of it. Sent from my SM-S901U using Tapatalk Do I have to set the decode to transmit? Or can I leave it blank for hitting a repeater ? I can hear the repeater w/o a decode tone no problem. Reason I'm asking is I can't hit a repeater 5 miles away with a 20w radio and mag mount rooftop antenna. I have the encode set to D423N..... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 kidphc Posted April 25 Report Share Posted April 25 You do not have to have a tone on receive. Since the tones block incomming messages that don't have matching tones. You would hear it if no tones are set on your radio, even if they have tones enabled.If you don't have tones on receive you will hear all transmissions on that frequency. No tones on encode shouldn't not be done (most repeaters have tones on input). So that it will ignore and not repeat any transmission that don't have matching tones.To complicate things more, there is cross repeater talk as well as repeaters with multiple tones.Sent from my SM-S901U using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WSCB609 Posted April 25 Author Report Share Posted April 25 34 minutes ago, kidphc said: You do not have to have a tone on receive. Since the tones block incomming messages that don't have matching tones. You would hear it if no tones are set on your radio, even if they have tones enabled. If you don't have tones on receive you will hear all transmissions on that frequency. No tones on encode shouldn't not be done (most repeaters have tones on input). So that it will ignore and not repeat any transmission that don't have matching tones. To complicate things more, there is cross repeater talk as well as repeaters with multiple tones. Sent from my SM-S901U using Tapatalk So I have the Encode set correctly at D423N as shown in the original post. Ok, I'll keep working on it. Interestingly, this repeater has been down for 4 days, Not a peep on that channel. WRUU653 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 kidphc Posted April 25 Report Share Posted April 25 So I have the Encode set correctly at D423N as shown in the original post. Ok, I'll keep working on it. Interestingly, this repeater has been down for 4 days, Not a peep on that channel.If the repeate comes up and you still can't make it. Might be worth finding a high peak closer to the repeater. Especially, with a ht.Not all repeaters are created equal.Sent from my SM-S901U using Tapatalk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WSCB609 Posted April 25 Author Report Share Posted April 25 27 minutes ago, kidphc said: If the repeate comes up and you still can't make it. Might be worth finding a high peak closer to the repeater. Especially, with a ht. Not all repeaters are created equal. Sent from my SM-S901U using Tapatalk It's not a HT, it's a mobile unit , 20W's. I'll keep working on it. There are trees in between though, that may be it. Thanks for the answers ! FYI, I know there is a 5 meg diff between Tx and Rx. WRUU653 and kidphc 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
0 WRUU653 Posted April 26 Report Share Posted April 26 4 hours ago, WSCB609 said: Just a friendly heads up. When asking questions about repeaters don’t post specific info on the repeater unless you are in the private (members only) area of the forum. So maybe just don’t include the name of the repeater or leave out specific tones. Here’s the what and why per forum rules located here. Private content. Do not post sensitive information such as repeater PL/DPL (also known as privacy or CTCSS/DCS tones) tones outside of the Private Discussion forum. This is to protect sensitive information from being picked up and indexed by search engines such as Google and Bing. 4 hours ago, WSCB609 said: D423 the same as D423N The N indicates Normal while an I would be for Inverted. 3 hours ago, WSCB609 said: FYI, I know there is a 5 meg diff between Tx and Rx As you mentioned there is a +5 for Tx. It is worth noting that the +5 is automatically added on the preset repeater channels of GMRS radios and won’t require you to add it. You may know this already so I mean no disrespect by mentioning it, just trying to help. It sounds like you are on the right path. kidphc and WRXB215 2 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Question
WSCB609
You would think as old as radio is, these would be standardized by now.
Also, is D423 the same as D423N ?
Link to comment
Share on other sites
7 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.