as one time I had a VHF one that did both 91.x  and 167.

could only use one at a time but both would bring up the repeater when not in 
use.

John

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: william...@aol.com 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Thursday, August 13, 2009 10:36 PM
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Motorola MTR2000 Question


    
  I believe the MTR can only do one tone code at a time.

  bb

  In a message dated 8/13/2009 9:19:46 P.M. Central Daylight Time, 
maire-rad...@verizon.net writes:



    how about one repeater but different tone codes?

    or the repeater is at some other location.

    John
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Christopher Hodgdon 
      To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
      Sent: Thursday, August 13, 2009 8:43 PM
      Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Motorola MTR2000 Question


        
      I wish I had a picture of the repeater house. The frequency listed on the 
MTR2000 is that of the schools maint. department. The other MTR2000, hook to 
the other antenna, is the Schools PD. I know those for a fact. Now its time to 
locate the other repeater system. 

      The only odd ball thing I do know is that every once in a while, when a 
bus is talking to another bus or dispatch, you get a high squeal walk on over 
them, but its most likely another drive not paying attention and trying to key 
their radio. But I wonder if it might be the maint. since their frequency is so 
close to ours.

      --- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, "Gary" <n6...@...> wrote:
      >
      > The UHF repeater is likely mismarked or the frequency info you obtained 
for
      > your school's license is inaccurate. The UHF repeater is likely the 
school's
      > repeater. As mentioned earlier the MTR2000 is a multi-channel radio but 
can
      > only repeat on the channel it is left on. Recommend you find a dealer or
      > tech experienced with the MTR and who has the software necessary to
      > configure it. Have them download its codeplug. Recommend you do the same
      > with your school radios. A comparison of the data will likely answer a 
lot.
      > Gary
      > 
      > -----Original Message-----
      > From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
      > [mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Christopher 
Hodgdon
      > Sent: Thursday, August 13, 2009 4:29 PM
      > To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
      > Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Motorola MTR2000 Question
      > 
      > Here's the deal, I work for a local school district, I have been kind of
      > thrust into a temp. communications specialist position while we obtain 
some
      > new buses and working with the company that will be adding the new 
radios to
      > them.
      > 
      > Over the last few weeks, we have been trying to determine the location 
of
      > our repeater. The place were it is listed on the FCC license paperwork 
does
      > not exist. I know, I am pushing them to get it updated. But that is
      > another story all together.
      > 
      > I do have access to a "radio house" located at our high school football
      > field and it has two MTR2000 in it, plus two different antennas. One
      > connected to one radio and one connected to the other.
      > 
      > One radio is marked with the description of KISD PD, which is our police
      > department for the district and has the following frequency pair listed 
on
      > it:
      > 
      > VHF: RX 173.325 DPL 331 and TX 158.385 DPL 331
      > 
      > The other radio is marked the following:
      > 
      > UHF: 451.725 / 456.725
      > 
      > There is no documentation with this equipment, the person incharge of 
them
      > originally left the district some years ago and no one knows anything 
about
      > them, expect where they are located, as far as these two boxes go and 
what
      > frequencies that have listed.
      > 
      > 
      > Which brings me back to our department, we can find out repeater located
      > anywhere physcially. Our repeater pair is listed as:
      > 
      > UHF: 451.750 / 456.750
      > 
      > That is according to FCC, repeater listing and other information I have 
been
      > able to obtain and by listening to it on a UHF amateur radio to see 
which
      > frequency they were on.
      > 
      > That being said, it is possible that the MTR2000 that is marked with 
the one
      > UHF frequency, might actually have both pairs programmed into it, but 
only
      > one can run at a time, right?
      > 
      > Is there a way to find out if there is more than one frequency is 
programmed
      > into the unit and if so, how might we go about that? Another reason I am
      > asking is that we might be upgrading our system in the very near future 
and
      > I might be able to get my hands on these repeaters.
      > 
      > Thanks in advance.
      > 
      > --- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, Brian Raker <brian.raker@>
      > wrote:
      > >
      > > The radio can be programmed for multiple frequency pairs. That being
      > > said, it cannot operate more than one channel / programmed pair of
      > > frequencies at one time.
      > > 
      > > -Brian / KF4ZWZ
      > > 
      > > On Thu, Aug 13, 2009 at 3:23 PM, Christopher
      > > Hodgdon<chris.hodgdon@> wrote:
      > > > This is a question I have been asked and don't have an answer for.  
This
      > could be for either amateur operation or commercial operation, but it
      > relates to the repeater itself.
      > > >
      > > > Can a Motorola MTR2000 setup on UHF be setup to function as a 
repeater
      > on more than one pair of frequencies?  I know looking at the brochure 
on the
      > website, it says that the NO. of Frequencies are upto 32.
      > > >
      > > > Does that mean it can handle two different sets of repeater pairs 
at the
      > same time in the same radio?
      > > >
      > > > These are commercial frequencies I am listed at commercial, but 
they are
      > for example purposes:
      > > >
      > > > Can the following setup work with the MTR2000?
      > > >
      > > > Frequency Pair 1: 451.725/456.725
      > > > Frequency Pair 2: 451.750/456.750
      > > >
      > > > Can one MTR2000 handle both of these at the same time?
      > > >
      > > > Thank in advance.
      > > >
      > > >
      > > >
      > > > ------------------------------------
      > > >
      > > >
      > > >
      > > > Yahoo! Groups Links
      > > >
      > > >
      > > >
      > > >
      > >
      > 
      > 
      > 
      > 
      > ------------------------------------
      > 
      > 
      > 
      > Yahoo! Groups Links
      >





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