GMRSJohn Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 Some of you seasoned hams will probably smirk and giggle at this but I sat in a ham club meeting tonight and learned about EchoLink. This is the coolest thing since sliced cheese.. of course I came home and downloaded it on my phone, showed my lovely wife who said “Well we didn’t need to buy you a ham radio..” Anyhoo.. I’m tinkering and learning this. One thing I forgot to ask at the club was if it might overstep my technician privileges? Quote
tweiss3 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 It only oversteps if it's linked to a 10M FM repeater (yes, there are some). In general, you are ok, because its only 6M, 2M, 70CM and higher frequencies. Its a pretty decent tool when out of town, but its has it's annoyances. GMRSJohn and RayDiddio 2 Quote
GMRSJohn Posted November 19 Author Report Posted November 19 9 minutes ago, tweiss3 said: It only oversteps if it's linked to a 10M FM repeater (yes, there are some). In general, you are ok, because its only 6M, 2M, 70CM and higher frequencies. Its a pretty decent tool when out of town, but its has it's annoyances. I see repeaters all over the world. It’s crazy.. Thanks for the response! Quote
WRYZ926 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 We had Echolink setup and switched them all out for Allstar. Allstar just works better. Quote
WRXB215 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 3 minutes ago, WRYZ926 said: We had Echolink setup and switched them all out for Allstar. Allstar just works better. That's what South Coast Reflector uses. Quote
tweiss3 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 The Ham VOIP image has both Allstar and Echolink baked into it. Allstar is best for linking repeaters together, and hotspot nodes, but Echolink is a nice addition for when you only have your phone and are out of town. WRUU653 and WRXB215 2 Quote
WRXB215 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 @tweiss3 that was a nice concise summery. Very well said. Quote
GMRSJohn Posted November 19 Author Report Posted November 19 Ok.. explain Allstar please. Looks like it’s for repeaters and doesn’t function the same as EchoLink. Quote
WRYZ926 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 You can use phone apps for Allstar too. We have several guys in the local club that use the Allstar apps on their phones all the time. Both systems require a repeater to have a node connected if you want to access the repeater through your phone. Here is a good place to start reading about Allstar https://www.allstarlink.org Davichko5650 and WRUU653 1 1 Quote
GMRSJohn Posted November 19 Author Report Posted November 19 44 minutes ago, WRYZ926 said: You can use phone apps for Allstar too. We have several guys in the local club that use the Allstar apps on their phones all the time. Both systems require a repeater to have a node connected if you want to access the repeater through your phone. Here is a good place to start reading about Allstar https://www.allstarlink.org Awesome! I’m still learning and trying make sense of it all.. lol. Practical applications for this stuff is kind of confusing to me other than just cool stuff to dabble in. We had a little crash course on Winlink last night. Kind of fascinating what you can do with this stuff! Quote
wayoverthere Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 Ive used both for checking into nets outside of RF range, in the sf Bay area and Seattle. Both can also be used to access a home radio when travelling, but depends on interfacing a radio to the computer (echolink) or node (all-star) WRUU653 1 Quote
WRYZ926 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 Most people that I talk to that have used both seem to prefer Allstar. I have a TYT TH-7800 dual band radio with a Digirig mobile for Winlink and Vara FM. The Digirig is easy to setup and all you need is the correct cables to connect it to your radio. I'm going to use my Xiegu G90 for Winlink and Vara HF. I'm waiting for the local HF Winlink repeater/server to be fully setup. I will eventually put both radios and my laptop into a go box for portable use. Quote
Davichko5650 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 13 hours ago, GMRSJohn said: Anyhoo.. I’m tinkering and learning this. One thing I forgot to ask at the club was if it might overstep my technician privileges? Provided the repeater on the other end is transmitting on a band you're licensed for, generally no. I mostly use it for talking to friends in TN on their 2m system via EL as well as checking in on their Tues night net. Also keep up with a buddy in FL on his EL linked 2m machine. For DX contacts I don't do on HF, I use a DMR HT to local 70cm Machine to get on WW English talk group. Most my dx is done on HF though. For Technicians btw, 10 meters has been very good of late, if you have the equipment to operate there, Europe and Asia have been out there to snag a chat or a quick QSO with. I use EchoLink when I need it as noted above, as I do with DMR, but I moreso love contacting people radio to radio. Since my youth, radio has always seemed magical in that regard. 73 N0TXW/WRJG283 Quote
WRYZ926 Posted November 19 Report Posted November 19 Echolink, Allstar, DMR, etc along with Winlink for VHF are well within the privileges of a technician license since they use the 2m and/or 70cm bands. Winlink on HF is outside of the privileges granted to technicians with exception of 10m. The 10m band is the only HF band where technicians have privileges in the RTTY/Data portions of the band. Most of the Winlink HF gateways are on 40m and 80m bands. While technicians do have CW privileges on 15m and 40m, they do not have RTTY/Data privileges on any HF band beyond 10m. Quote
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