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Posted
1 hour ago, AdmiralCochrane said:

If it doesn't have 15w or more on 1.25m, it's just another meh

The problem with most 50 watt tri-band radios is that they will only do 5 watts max on 1.25m. And HT's will be more like 1 watt or 2 watts on 1.25m. That's why I will not buy a tri-band radio. And right now the only two mono band 50 watt 1.25m mobile radios available is the Alinco DR-CS25T or the TYT TH-9000. And there is the 30 watt Bridgecom BCM-220. But none of those three radios get the best reviews, especially on e-ham.

It's a darn if you do and darn if you don't thing with 1.25m mono band radios. The big 3 manufacturers don't make them because there is not much of a demand. And no one wants to use 1.25m in most areas because no one makes a good 1.25m mobile.

I would use a tri band if we could get at least 20 watts on 1.25m or even a mono band radio if a good quality one was available new.

Posted
19 minutes ago, WRYZ926 said:

 And right now the only two mono band 50 watt 1.25m mobile radios available is the Alinco DR-CS25T or the TYT TH-9000. And there is the 30 watt Bridgecom BCM-220. But none of those three radios get the best reviews, especially on e-ham.

I actually have all three and the Alinco is the one that's in my shack ... the others are in their boxes.  I really like it.  It only has three reviews on e-ham (two 4 and one 5) so I think that's pretty good.

As far as HTs go, Kenwood has a history of putting out tri-banders that do full power on 220 (TH-F6A, TH-D74A, TH-D75A) so I"m hopeful that the mobile will do that too.

Pretty sure the TYT TH-350 does 5w on all three bands too.  I had one and it's a decent radio, IMHO a notch above some of the other CCRs.

The Yaesu VX-6R *does* fit into the "lower power on 220" category though, and that's kept me from buying one.  So far.😀

Posted
2 hours ago, WRYZ926 said:

The problem with most 50 watt tri-band radios is that they will only do 5 watts max on 1.25m. And HT's will be more like 1 watt or 2 watts on 1.25m.

That's one of the big things that kept me from getting a triband mobile. I have a couple handhelds that do, the wouxun is 5 watts, 2m/1.25m, and the yaesu vx7r does 300mW, iirc (220 was unadvertised for that reason, from what I read...it also has the standard 2m/70cm, and 6m.

I kick myself for not grabbing a uv920p (wouxun) when they were available, as there was a 2m/1.25 variant with 50 watts each. But for the amount of activity, it was hard to justify the cost of that or the Alinco, plus an antenna. 

The less expensive route I went was one of the Btech amps, to kick the power out of the handheld to 30 or so watts.

Posted

The lack of activity on the 1.25m band in my area is another reason why I have not bought a 1.25m radio. I do have the Wouxun KG-Q10H quad band. 

Here are the power output levels on the KG-Q10H using a Surecom SW-102 into a dummy load.

1.25m - 1.4 to 1.6 watts

2m - 4.5 to 5.1 watts

MURS - 1.4 to 1.8 watts

70cm - 4.1 to 4.5 watts

GMRS -  4.1 to 4.6 watts

6m - 1.0 to 1.3 watts

Power output will vary slightly depending on the frequency/channel on each band. And output levels are what I expected on each band. Tri band and quad band radios are a compromise. A mono band for 1.25 and 6m is ideal for the max power output on mobile radios.

Posted

The 1.25M band is sort of ignored by a lot of Hams. Most of it having to do with the fact the allocation is in ITU region 2, basically North America. Due to that few of the major manufactures make equipment for it.

I only know of two that make radios with digital modes that will operate on the band, Kenwood TH-D74A and TH-D75A for D-Star, and Anytone D578 radios for DMR with the proper band settings. Don't try using the D878.

Posted
2 hours ago, WRYZ926 said:

The lack of activity on the 1.25m band in my area is another reason why I have not bought a 1.25m radio. I do have the Wouxun KG-Q10H quad band. 

Here are the power output levels on the KG-Q10H using a Surecom SW-102 into a dummy load.

1.25m - 1.4 to 1.6 watts

2m - 4.5 to 5.1 watts

MURS - 1.4 to 1.8 watts

70cm - 4.1 to 4.5 watts

GMRS -  4.1 to 4.6 watts

6m - 1.0 to 1.3 watts

Power output will vary slightly depending on the frequency/channel on each band. And output levels are what I expected on each band. Tri band and quad band radios are a compromise. A mono band for 1.25 and 6m is ideal for the max power output on mobile radios.

I have similar numbers on my Q10H except I was higher on 1.25m at around 2.5 and slightly lower than you on 6m at .85, I’m not sure my battery was at 100% but probably close. 

Posted

The post mentioning DMR and the Anytone AT-D578 reminded my of another radio that fits in the "lower power on 220" category:  Alinco DR-MD520, which is the tr-band version of the DR-MD500 DMR radio.  (If you ever see them side-by-side you'll quickly discover that they are cousins to the D578.)

The MD520 will do 55 watts on 2 meters, 40 on 70cm, but only 5 watts on 220.

Posted (edited)
4 hours ago, Lscott said:

The 1.25M band is sort of ignored by a lot of Hams. Most of it having to do with the fact the allocation is in ITU region 2, basically North America. Due to that few of the major manufactures make equipment for it..

Kind of a chicken and the egg...less use because of less equipment, but less equipment because of the double whammy of less traffic and NA being the only market for 220.

Edit: this gave me the nudge to go ahead and email BTWR about future availability of that UV920p. 🤓 Maybe if we can show some interest we'll get another run?

Edit#2:heard back from BTWR, indicating the 220 version is discontinued 😣 the remote head would be a big win. Too bad the uv980 can't trade 10m for 1.25

Edited by wayoverthere
update with email response

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