What exactly is a community repeater?  I've seen references to it, but  
I haven't seen a definition yet.

Best regards,

Mike Benonis
Electrical Engineering '09
Department of Drama Sound Engineer
The University of Virginia
[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:mjb8h%40virginia.edu>
KI4RIX

On Feb 4, 2008, at 3:55 , sgreact47 wrote:

> Acually it IS a C64RCB-3105AY which is a eight user comunity
> repeater.
>
>
> "Eric Lemmon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>>
>> Mike,
>>
>> The C64RCB-3105AT (I'm pretty sure the "Y" is actually a "T")
> station is
>> described as:
>>
>> C = Compa Station
>> 64 = 75 watt output in the UHF band
>> RCB = Continuous Duty PA
>> 3 = PL Tone-Coded Squelch
>> 1 = N/A
>> 0 = 1 TX and 1 RX
>> 5 = DC Remote Control
>> AT = Repeater Station
>>
>> You can get more information by looking at the numbers stamped on
> the
>> various boards.
>>
>> 73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
>> [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mike Benonis
>> Sent: Saturday, February 02, 2008 1:38 PM
>> To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
>> Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Micor Repeater - ID?
>>
>> Good day,
>> I just picked up what I believe is a Micor repeater at a Hamfest
>> today for free. I'm told the repeater works, but I can't verify
>> that. Here's what I know about it:
>>
>> Form Factor: Rack-Mounted
>> Model Number: C64RCB-3105AY
>> FCC Xmit Info: CC4224C
>> FCC Rcvr Info: RC0080
>> Frequency: 464.050 MHz (I assume this is TX, but it doesn't say
>> specifically on the label)
>>
>> Cards installed:
>> 2x Four User Control Modules
>> 1x Master Decoder
>> 1x Squelch Gate
>> 1x Station COntrol Module
>> 1x Time Out Timer
>>
>> It has a Motorola power supply in the rack at the bottom. I didn't
>> see any cans mounted in the rack, but I only found one N connector
> on
>> the back (ublabeled, of course, but it looks like it comes out of a
>> large silver box at the top of the rack with a heatsink on it. I
> can
>> provide photos of the unit if needed.
>>
>> I'd like to convert this down to the 440 MHz amateur band if
> possible,
>> for less than say, $1000 in new parts/repairs. Can anyone tell me,
>> based on the information given, if this seems like a reasonable
> thing
>> to do? If this is a boat anchor, I'm perfectly happy to get rid of
> it
>> - but I figured, for free, what do I lose?
>>
>> Best regards,
>>
>> Mike Benonis
>> Electrical Engineering '09
>> Department of Drama Sound Engineer
>> The University of Virginia
>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:mjb8h%40virginia.edu>
>> KI4RIX
>>
>
>

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