[Repeater-Builder] Re: MOTO R-100 Problem

2008-11-17 Thread sgreact47
I sent the jumper information direct to Brian.

JU14 IN, JU16 and JU17 out, solder in jumpers on the 'main' board.
TP29 is the Receiver enable logic level
TP31 is the Exciter audio enable logic level.

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Brian
 Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2008 4:05 PM
 To: LMR
 Subject: [LMR] MOTO R-100 Problem
 
 Dear group:
 I have a problem with a Motorola R-100 repeater.
 During the hang time, the rxvr is switched to COS, and it is
annoying to 
 hear any co-channel traffic until drop-out.
 Is there a jumper or dip sw. that will keep the rxvr PL on full time?
 Guidance solicited, and surely appreciated.
 Brian





RE: [Repeater-Builder] Decibel DB-4076 duplexers

2008-11-17 Thread Jeff DePolo

There were a number or revisions to the DB-4076 over the years - here are at
least 4 different cable lengths/sets depending on the vintage that I'm aware
of.  There is no magic formula.

--- Jeff WN3A


 -Original Message-
 From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of James Adkins
 Sent: Sunday, November 16, 2008 6:08 PM
 To: repeater-builder
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Decibel DB-4076 duplexers
 
 I just got a set of Decibel DB-4076 duplexers, currently 
 tuned to 452.xxx and 457.xxx Mhz.  It has not cables, however.
  
 Does anyone know the length of the interconnect cables needed 
 for these duplexers, or would I just need to make a 1/2 
 electrical wavelength cable for each of the 4 cables?
  
 Thanks,
 
 -- 
 James Adkins, KB0NHX
 
 
  
 
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 Date: 11/17/2008 8:48 AM
 
 
 



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Versatone chip wanted

2008-11-17 Thread wd8chl
Tom Clarke wrote:
 Anyone out there got a spare 146.5 Hz GE Versatone
 chip (19C320291G1) they would like to pass on?  This is for an MVP.
 I have a 138.5 chip in there now.  Buy or trade.
 
 73 de Tom/W4OKW

You mean 146.2.
And 138.5? That's an odd one...but I've seen some...81.0 and 188.0 have 
come up a few times...


[Repeater-Builder] F/S: MICOR Unified Chassis UHF

2008-11-17 Thread n9wys
I have a number of (approx 12) UHF MICOR Unified Chassis Community Repeater
stations in various states of disassembly.  Some are complete other than
cards and channel elements; others have been scavenged to various degrees
for parts.  I also have two power amplifiers (I believe they are both 75W
units).  

 

PLEASE KNOW:  these are DISASSEMBLED stations - there are NO power supplies,
channel elements or cabinets available.  Some control cards are also
available.  Before I try to peddle this stuff at a popular auction site, I
figured I'd offer to the readers of these lists first.  Photos can be
provided upon request, and first inquiries get best choice as to which
chassis they can obtain.

 

For what it is worth, I was able to reconstitute one of these into a working
GMRS repeater.  However, these stations were disassembled when I obtained
them, so they are sold as is.  NO guarantee is offered.

 

All items are located in the Southwest suburban Chicago area (Joliet), so
pick up is probably more of a viable option than shipping.  

If you are interested, contact me off-list at:  n9wys (at) ameritech
(dot) net and I will attempt to answer any questions you may have.

 

Mark - N9WYS



Re: [Repeater-Builder] 900mhz , DTR, 906 to 923.75 MHz FHSS

2008-11-17 Thread ANDRE
thank all,

Yes, i am im Brazil, and we use GMRS radios but we do not need GMRS licence 
here.

I can use 900mhz dtr or UHF GRMS radios, i have both.

But here, the 900mhz is more clean than the uhf,

So i thoght to make a digital repeater for this DTR or other fhss radio, but i 
do not know any a apm, and the repeater that are FHSS (or do not need to be?)

John, will you recommend any repeater (small) GRMS?

Thanks ALL

( i do not want to buy a UHF comercial Licence  to install a big repeater only 
to me) 



  - Original Message - 
  From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2008 3:06 PM
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] 900mhz , DTR, 906 to 923.75 MHz FHSS


  He's in Brazil.  I don't think they have GMRS there.

  Mike WA6ILQ

  At 12:57 AM 11/15/08, you wrote:



Get yourself a GMRS license  and put up a small 462.5 75 to 462.725 
repeater and all of your family could use it.
 
John
 
 

  - Original Message - 

  From: ANDRE 

  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 

  Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2008 11:44 AM

  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] 900mhz , DTR, 906 to 923.75 MHz FHSS


  Hi all,


  I have 2 motorola DTR FHSS 900mhz, and i want to bild a repeater for use 
in my farm thats near my store , 5miles.

  I know the max watts DTR are 1W, and i didnt find any Repeater or amp for 
it.


  I found 900MHz Smartamp, 10W amp that works on FHSS, so i was wondering,


  Can i use a DTR + simplex 40second rec + smartamp + antenna?


  Will this amp (its for data) - 12-103 SmartAmp Bi-Directional 900 MHz: 10 
Watt Designed for extending the range of 900 MHz wireless radio devices, this 
is particularly

  effective when used with Direct Sequence or Frequency Hopping Spread 
Spectrum. Full output power of 10 W is achieved with only 16 mW input to the

  amplifier. Above 16 mW input, the SmartAmpT attenuates the input signal 
power and maintains the output power typically at 10W. The built-in dynamic 
power sensor in SmartAmpT adjusts the Radio Frequency (RFF) power output level 
by reading the input signal power. This Automatic Gain Control (AGC) 
Technology, Teletronics' patented technology effectively making the RF 
amplifiers Plug  Play delivers the maximum output power at various input 
levels while keeping the

  distortion at a minimum. 


  Technical Specifications Smartamp


  Features:


  10 Watt


  Operating Range:


  902 - 928 MHz


  Operating Mode:


  Bi-directional, TDD


  Transmit Gain:


  28 dB (can be customized to 33dB)


  Frequency Response:


  ± 0.75 dB over operating range 


  Output Power:


  10 Watt (+40 dBm) nominal


  TX Input Power:


  500mW


  Receiver Gain:


  12 dB typical ±1 dB 


  Noise Figure:


  3.5 dB typical


  Connectors:


  N-type, female, 50 Ohm


  Lightning Protection:


  Quarter Wave Technology


  DC Surge Protection:


  Available


  Power Consumption:


  2A @ 12-15 VDC (100% duty cycle)


  Operating Temperature:


  Amplifier: -30 °C to + 70 °C 

  15V DC injector: -30 °C to + 70 °C 


  will work in this way?

  or anyone knows a repeater for this digital radios(cheap please) 


  Thanks


  Mattos



   

Re: [Repeater-Builder] 900mhz , DTR, 906 to 923.75 MHz FHSS

2008-11-17 Thread ANDRE
Benjamin,

Do you know any brand, model? 

Thanks


  - Original Message - 
  From: Benjamin L. Naber 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2008 4:05 PM
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] 900mhz , DTR, 906 to 923.75 MHz FHSS


  An idea is to use a simple repeater controller connected to the radios'
  speaker-mic connections.

  one radio will receive only, one radio will transmit only. Make sure you
  keep them separated about nine feet or greater if you are going to use
  the amp on the one that is going to transmit.

  ~Benjamin, KB9LFZ

  On Thu, 2008-11-13 at 14:44 -0200, ANDRE wrote:
   Hi all,
   
   I have 2 motorola DTR FHSS 900mhz, and i want to bild a repeater for
   use in my farm thats near my store , 5miles.
   I know the max watts DTR are 1W, and i didnt find any Repeater or amp
   for it.
   
   I found 900MHz Smartamp, 10W amp that works on FHSS, so i was
   wondering,
   
   Can i use a DTR + simplex 40second rec + smartamp + antenna?
   
   Will this amp (its for data) - 12-103 SmartAmp Bi-Directional 900 MHz:
   10 Watt Designed for extending the range of 900 MHz wireless radio
   devices, this is particularly
   effective when used with Direct Sequence or Frequency Hopping Spread
   Spectrum. Full output power of 10 W is achieved with only 16 mW input
   to the
   amplifier. Above 16 mW input, the SmartAmp™ attenuates the input
   signal power and maintains the output power typically at 10W. The
   built-in dynamic power sensor in SmartAmp™ adjusts the Radio Frequency
   (RF) power output level by reading the input signal power. This
   Automatic Gain Control (AGC) Technology, Teletronics' patented
   technology effectively making the RF amplifiers Plug  Play delivers
   the maximum output power at various input levels while keeping the
   distortion at a minimum. 
   
   Technical Specifications Smartamp
   
   Features:
   
   10 Watt
   
   Operating Range:
   
   902 - 928 MHz
   
   Operating Mode:
   
   Bi-directional, TDD
   
   Transmit Gain:
   
   28 dB (can be customized to 33dB)
   
   Frequency Response:
   
   ± 0.75 dB over operating range 
   
   Output Power:
   
   10 Watt (+40 dBm) nominal
   
   TX Input Power:
   
   500mW
   
   Receiver Gain:
   
   12 dB typical ±1 dB 
   
   Noise Figure:
   
   3.5 dB typical
   
   Connectors:
   
   N-type, female, 50 Ohm
   
   Lightning Protection:
   
   Quarter Wave Technology
   
   DC Surge Protection:
   
   Available
   
   Power Consumption:
   
   2A @ 12-15 VDC (100% duty cycle)
   
   Operating Temperature:
   
   Amplifier: -30 °C to + 70 °C 
   15V DC injector: -30 °C to + 70 °C 
   
   will work in this way?
   or anyone knows a repeater for this digital radios(cheap please) 
   
   Thanks
   
   Mattos
   
   
   
   
   



   

[Repeater-Builder] Re: Two UHF Repeaters - one antenna

2008-11-17 Thread dlake02
Mike

1.6Mhz is the standard split on 70cm, so we have a standard set of 
cavities for that (yes, they are lossy...)

We can move to a 7.6Mhz split, but that moves my voice frequencies to 
438.525 RX and 430.925 TX, even closer to D-Star TX and RX !

We only have one antenna - actually, we only have one flag-pole (it's 
a hollow fibre-glass flagpole on the top of a church steeple - 
commercial sites are no longer available in the UK due to the high 
costs).

As regards a Hybrid Combiner, I need some help understanding this 
please !

Thanks

David - G4ULF

--- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, Mike Mullarkey [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
wrote:

 David,
 
  
 
 I would say this could be easy but since you have you have a 1.6Mhz 
split on
 the Voice repeater it will be tough with one antenna. You are going 
to have
 to use ¾ wave cavities for the transmit combiner and a lot of loss. 
I could
 not this working out unless you have a hybrid combiner and other 
items. If
 you can add another antenna it is a slam dunk as long as you have 
30ft of
 separation between the TX  RX Antennas.
 
  
 
 Mike K7PFJ
 
   _  
 
 From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of dlake02
 Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2008 10:04 AM
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Two UHF Repeaters - one antenna
 
  
 
 Hello
 
 I need some advice - I've searched the group and can't find an 
answer,
 so I call on the collected wisdom here, but apologise in advance for
 taking your time.
 
 I have a repeater site that has a single antenna, VHF and UHF. Now,
 combining the VHF and UHF is fine, although lossy. 
 
 But, we want to add D-Star at 70cm, which means that I will have two
 UHF repeaters, two sets of cavities.
 
 How do I combine the output of the two cavities prior to feeding to
 the VHF/UHF combiner ?
 
 My frequencies are close: 
 D-Star TX 439.6125
 FM RX 434.650
 FM TX 433.050
 D-Star RX 430.6125
 
 Do I just couple to another T-piece ? Are the cable lengths critical
 ? Has anyone got experience of doing this ? 
 
 Thanks in advance for your assistance.
 
 David - G4ULF





Re: [Repeater-Builder] GM-300 Repeater (was 900mhz , DTR, 906 to 923.75 MHz FHSS)

2008-11-17 Thread Jim Brown
Andre, a pair of Motorola GM-300 radios can be interconnected as a repeater 
using a cable available on eBay for about 10 USD.  I have used two radios set 
up like this, one as the receive and the other as the transmit and they worked 
just fine as a repeater.  No squelch tail on the simple cable, but no problem 
getting them to work.  The cable has a pot to set the repeated deviation, and 
that is the only adjustment required.

73 - Jim  W5ZIT

--- On Mon, 11/17/08, ANDRE [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: ANDRE [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] 900mhz , DTR, 906 to 923.75 MHz FHSS
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Date: Monday, November 17, 2008, 6:56 AM














Benjamin,
 
Do you know any brand, model? 
 
Thanks
 
 


 

















  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Two UHF Repeaters - one antenna

2008-11-17 Thread Milt
Is there any possibility of reversing the TX and RX frequencies of the FM 
analog repeater? 

Milt 
N3LTQ

  - Original Message - 
  From: Mike Mullarkey 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Sunday, November 16, 2008 12:07 PM
  Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Two UHF Repeaters - one antenna


  David,

   

  I would say this could be easy but since you have you have a 1.6Mhz split on 
the Voice repeater it will be tough with one antenna. You are going to have to 
use ¾ wave cavities for the transmit combiner and a lot of loss. I could not 
this working out unless you have a hybrid combiner and other items. If you can 
add another antenna it is a slam dunk as long as you have 30ft of separation 
between the TX  RX Antennas.

   

  Mike K7PFJ


--

  From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
dlake02
  Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2008 10:04 AM
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Two UHF Repeaters - one antenna

   

  Hello

  I need some advice - I've searched the group and can't find an answer,
  so I call on the collected wisdom here, but apologise in advance for
  taking your time.

  I have a repeater site that has a single antenna, VHF and UHF. Now,
  combining the VHF and UHF is fine, although lossy. 

  But, we want to add D-Star at 70cm, which means that I will have two
  UHF repeaters, two sets of cavities.

  How do I combine the output of the two cavities prior to feeding to
  the VHF/UHF combiner ?

  My frequencies are close: 
  D-Star TX 439.6125
  FM RX 434.650
  FM TX 433.050
  D-Star RX 430.6125

  Do I just couple to another T-piece ? Are the cable lengths critical
  ? Has anyone got experience of doing this ? 

  Thanks in advance for your assistance.

  David - G4ULF