What would these pairs be? I never heard of a plan like that here... Nice to 
know for futues...
I have several Motorola HT's in weather proof boxes (xtal control) that were 
used for data radios...
 73
 Mike - N7ZEF

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Peter Dakota Summerhawk 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Sunday, August 17, 2008 1:34 PM
  Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] RE: Good source for single channel Motorola 
radios for portable repeater?


  I was talking with our coordinator about this and we have several pairs that 
are not being used for the sole purpose of having them for special event 
repeaters state wide for Wyoming. Crossband is one way we go but the special 
event repeater pair would be nice to have for better coverage as not everyone 
carries a dual-band radio for such an event. Most hams use 2M around here and 
the events for the comm van are coordinated with other ARES/RACES groups to 
assure that we are not going to have the same problem.



  Thanks

  Peter Summerhawk-N0WRE



  -----Original Message-----
  From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
Mike Pugh
  Sent: Sunday, August 17, 2008 12:09 PM
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] RE: Good source for single channel Motorola 
radios for portable repeater?




  > Morning Crew,
  >
  > I need some help locating some of the Motorola single channel
  > radios with the 16 pin connector on the back for use in a portable repeater
  > for our comm van to be used as a special events repeater. Been hunting EBay
  > with little to no success, does anyone have just two that they would like t=
  > o
  > get rid of? I need them in the 146-173 band split if possible.
  >
  > Let me know by email on this.
  Might I make a suggestion? Several years ago, I was approached by an 
  ARES group with a comm van wanting to do the same thing. They had a 
  pneumatic mast in theirs (a former tv remote truck). I suggested that 
  they use multi channel radios, and program them for several unused 
  pairs, and that they not use duplexers. By mounting one antenna on the 
  mast, the other on the van roof, they could get enough vertical 
  separation on UHF frequencies (which I also suggested they use) to field 
  a repeater quite nicely. If they rolled up on a scene and found a 
  repeater already on the frequency that their repeater was on, this setup 
  gave them the ability to move to other pairs until they found a quite 
  pair to use, just match the channel numbers on each radio to move to the 
  next pair.

  They agreed that this was a good idea, however, they wanted to stay on 
  VHF and wanted something to talk 20-30 miles, so they nixed my idea. 
  Ultimately, their ideas never flew, and they never took my suggestion, 
  so they are now pretty much disbanded.

  FWIW I guess. 73 Mike KA4MKG

   

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