Yes here in Dallas. Google is a very good place to start. They have been
very helpful in finding parts in the past.
Charles Miller
- Original Message -
From: "KE5CTY Bob" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 9:30 PM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] PARTS
> Wow I had no i
Gary,
The 19D424266G1 PA is a 110 watt board that uses two high-power
transistors in parallel. Here's the manual:
http://www.repeater-builder.com/ge/lbi-library/lbi-30739j.pdf
73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Local 2 mtr repeater using MastrII Base repeater station experienc
You need to go in the setup program on the panasonic computer and
turn on port for the memory location. Its in the book on how to do it.
Yahoo! Groups Links
To visit your group on the web, go to:http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/
To unsubscribe from this group
Local 2 mtr repeater using MastrII Base repeater station experiencing power
amp failure. Circuit board 19D424266G1 Rev3. I do not have manual. Am told its a
100 watt unit. It does not have the 4 parallel output transistors in PA
section. Symptoms are: turn up power control to 90 watts and
Besides the other companies mentioned I use:
Ocean State Electronics http://www.oselectronics.com/
Electronic Goldmine
http://www.goldmine-elec.com/default.htm
Dan's Small Parts and Kits
http://www.danssmallpartsandkits.net/
Circuit Specialists
http://www.web-tronics.com/
DC Kits
http://www.dc
Simply go to Google and enter your device number in the search line - Works for
me most all the time NØATH / Dave
- Original Message -
From: "KE5CTY Bob" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 9:30 PM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] PARTS
Wow I had no idea things had chan
Wow I had no idea things had changed so much. What about resources for
looking up parts specs? Are there any on the internet you can go to and look
up a part number like a resistor number and at least get the specs on it?
BTW I see you are in the Dallas area also. We are in Poolville out here past
I posted the following message once before when simulcast transmitters were
being discussed but I don't think it made it to the list:
I've taken cell-site-surplus rubidium oscillators with 10 MHz outputs and
used them as the reference for GE Delta-S synthesized radios. If memory
serves the stock
Bob,
You are just starting and finding that it is getting very hard to find parts
to build anything.
There are a lot of fun things to build and can be very educating at the same
time.
I have built a lot of radios when Heath Kits were around. I have also built
some the kits you can find on the in
Jameco
Mouser
Hosfelt
Digi-Key
MCM
JDR Microdevices
Chuck
WB2EDV
- Original Message -
From:
John J.
Riddell
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 10:08
PM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder]
PARTS
Try Mendelsons in Dayton Ohi
Try Mendelsons in Dayton Ohio or
Skycraft Surplus in Winterpark Florida
73 John VE3AMZ
- Original Message -
From:
KE5CTY Bob
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 9:51 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] PARTS
I have been all over eb
I have been all over ebay, does anyone know where my son and I can find a
bunch of Ham Radio related spare parts for building some of the home brew
projects we are finding all over the internet but no parts, like transistros,
resistors, coils, fets, diodes, connectors, ect in one lump purch
Well, the specs for LMR400 (same frequency - same length) is 0.388 dB
and 9913 is .421 dB. RG-6 would be 0.932 dB.
So, if 0.34 is too much, the others you mentioned would be no solution.
Joe M.
Ralph Mowery wrote:
>
> --- mch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Thanks for the quick reply. I could
Bradley,
I have plenty of GE Voter chassis and cards, give me a email at
[EMAIL PROTECTED] if interested.
Paul
-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of skipp025
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 8:22 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
I've not seen anyone offer up a >2 channel voter kit
since the early Doug Hall boards.
There was the early 2 channel ARRL Unit, but you
mentioned you wanted 3 or more channels.
Don't know if it would be worth the time and expense
to build a 3/4 channel voter from parts. The better
thought
E F
Johnson had a similar solution for this, they sent it in syringes! I
have one sitting next to my computer right now.
Paul
-Original Message-From:
Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]On Behalf Of Dan
HancockSent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 7:52
John and Group,
While in the paging industry we had a high band, UHF and 900 MHz paging
systems. We ran analog on some and always the highest speed digital paging
available. All we had for a time base was the old Ovenaire high stab
oscillator until some time later. As a rule we netted the trans
There is a Canadian product that is excellent for
connectionsit's called Stabilant 22
and has been around for years. It is a contact
enhancer.
It is quite expensive but you only need a tiny drop
of it. I've used it on all kinds of co-ax
connectors and most of my repeater desense went a
Radio shack now carries DeOxit and ProGold which are excellent
products for contacts.
Yahoo! Groups Links
<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/
<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
<*> Your u
Many years ago, my friend W8ICN told me of a cure for the invisible corrosion on Micor pins that they had developed at Detroit Edison. I couldn't remember what it was, so I dropped him an email about it. Here is his reply.
Dan Hancock N8DJP
We used a mixture of Squibb mineral oil and isopropol a
That's just it, resources!! I would love to put up a simulcast system. But
the time, money, & other resources make it basically impossible. To do it
right, you need to have it syn'ch to GPS. The OLDER systems that used high
accuracy crystals in ovens needed regular attention. I make it to my
r
Hello,
I was collecting parts for a UHF Simulcast system at one time, I had
collected several Quintron exciters for this purpose and kind of lost
interest. I have way to much to do but I have had over 20 years in the
Simulcast paging industry. The company I worked for had Quintron install
the fi
Steve,
How did they do, did it come back working OK and fixed? I have a CE-4 and a
CE-50 that I need worked on if they do OK. I have talked to Paul Nappo
several times and he seems OK. I wonder what happened to Ron Kelly, the K
in their old KNS company, now NS Electronics. Their website is
htt
NS in Atlanta worked on my 6300 last time.
SSB
-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kevin Berlen, K9HX
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 8:21 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Cushamn Service Moni
I saw a disciplined oscillator using cdma cellular instead of gps - This
would be useful in synchronizing transmitter oscillators. Ed O Conner at
Simulcast Solutions has been a super helpful resource.
The other half of the picture would be site voting receivers...
Most ham clubs do not have the
Good day all
I am looking for a circuit diagram for a 3 to 4 or
more channel noise/voting circuit .
Non intelligent (uP) controlled due to high lightning
rate per annum.
Regards
Bradley Glen ZS5WT
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail
Does anyone know where I might find a COS output on a GE MLS 1? These
are the older PROM MLS radios.
Also, I'm open to any other ideas. I've checked out the COS detector
circuit on the repeater builder website but it looks like I'd have to
have the squelch open all the time, if I got it rig
Hi John
I will answer. I think it was regarding my plea for a
service manual for a GE Ranger low band P19C852051P8. Iam in the UK
Steve M1SWB
- Original Message -
From: "John J. Riddell" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 9:36 PM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Re: he
Good posting ...
Neil - WA6KLA
Rich Misener wrote:
>
> Steve,
>
> Check out these links for info on the Spokane Repeater Group's
> simulcast system. You can contact Karl or Pete directly and they
> will be most helpfull.
>
> http://www.k7pp.com/articlesbyk7pp.html
>
> http://www.dalek
Hi Jerry,what was the question...?
John. VE3AMZ
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 1:05 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: help, wanted
> Try John VE3 AMZ., see QRZ.COM., he lives in the Kitchner Ontario area
>
> Jerry VE3 EXT
>
>
I was told that cable starts to act like lossy waveguide when the cable
gets large and the frequency get high. I now see that good RF cable
manufactures and sellers now publish the upper frequency limit when they
publish loss for larger cable.
73
Glenn
WB4UIV
At 09:50 PM 06/04/05, mch wrote:
Check out their website, the guys email addresses are there.
http://www.nselectronics.com/
Paul
-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Mathew Quaife
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 7:56 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [R
You
may want to check with NS Electronics in Atlanta Georgia I believe, the last guy
I talked to was a guy named Paul. NS is actually the closest descendant
company from the old Cushman company, it used to be KNS. The "K" stood for
Ron Kelly, one of the main engineers with the original C
Hi
Have a look at "Simulcast Solutions "webpage as they
have much info on their site that is extremely
interesting.
Remember -frequency-phase and deviation from each
transmitter is very important.
Regards
Bradley Glen ZS5WT
--- Steve Rodgers <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> Thanks for all the
Thanks for all the replies. One thing I hadn't considered was the audio delay
matching requirements. I was more interested in simulcast for frequency reuse
then using it for the same audio on multiple TX's. It looks like all you'll
get is unintelligible audio in areas where TX's overlap.
Stev
Hi
thanks, I take it this was re my plea for a GE rangr manual
Had a look on qrz, no email address.
Getting nowere fast with this
73
Steve M1SWB
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 6:05 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: help, wanted
> Try
FYI
Cardinal electronics (successor to triton) in arlington heights Il
Bob Lipold very knowledgeable and relaible .he's on the web
also
Feitek Electronics in st louis mo. Bernie feissle also has website
mdm ted"Kevin Berlen, K9HX" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
We used Triton Electronics several yea
Try John VE3 AMZ., see QRZ.COM., he lives in the Kitchner Ontario area
Jerry VE3 EXT
Yahoo! Groups Links
<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/
<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
<*> Your
Steve,
Check out these links for info on the Spokane Repeater Group's
simulcast system. You can contact Karl or Pete directly and they
will be most helpfull.
http://www.k7pp.com/articlesbyk7pp.html
http://www.dalek.org/srg/tech.html
Have fun---Dick---N7ZH
--- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroup
At 10:01 AM 6/5/2005, Mathew Quaife wrote:
>Hi Dave, what the IRC wants to know is if there is any activity on
>the frequencies that you have been given to listen to. Then once
>you hear the activity, get the callsings of those using thre
>frequency. You are listening for various things, first
HI Steve
You know Mike (DAC) has done that with pagenet and the other companys he has
worked for if we can ever tie him down for a bit of time he should be a world
of info, I would think you need a Hi Stability TO.
on both repeaters.
.bob
Has anyone implemented a simulcast (multiple TX's
I see that Dave Jacobs, the author of Scanner recorder has an
update. Version 1.8.1 with minor changes. He is also asking for a small
donation to encourage him to make more changes to the program. I sent one
in, as this has been the best software I have found so far to record
interference an
I purchased a GE suitcase programmer to use with Phoenix, Delta, and
Ranger mobiles. It has a Panasonic handheld computer, I/O module with 6 slide
in contact slots, a printer, EPROM and serial board, and a plug in memory
module that holds the specific radio programming information. The me
--- Dave VanHorn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Ok, I've been given several frequencies to listen
> to, prior to
> getting a pair assigned.
>
> What troubles me is that my home setup is never
> going to hear what I
> would hear at the repeater site.
> I could put the receiver at the repeater
--- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, "Matt Beasant" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
"...I'm searching for some data on the devices in a Motorola UHF
Paging system PA...The devices are: M1107 and M11L60..."
__
Finding cross references
Hi Dave, what the IRC wants to know is if there is any activity on the frequencies that you have been given to listen to. Then once you hear the activity, get the callsings of those using thre frequency. You are listening for various things, first coordinated activity, then uncoordinated activ
--- mch <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Thanks for the quick reply. I couldn't find that
> anywhere on the net.
>
> I have a guy who is telling me that 0.34 dB (at 900
> MHz)
> is too much loss on a SCANNER antenna run. LOL!
>
> I'm going to ask him if I should use HJ9-50 instead.
> ;->
>
While t
Here's what you want. Scanner Recorder. http://www.davee.com/scanrec/
Hook your scanner/receiver to a soundcard and let it run. ScanRec will
record the audio and Time/Date stamp when that recording was.
Also works great for documenting "LIDS" or abusers of your machine.
Will run on an old 486 or b
At 09:23 AM 6/5/2005, Jim Cicirello wrote:
>How about a tape recorder with VOX on the receiver? I have done this with a
>scanner, like the Bearcat with the recording option to where you can tell it
>to record on receive so the tape does not run all the time. At quieter sites
>where a weak front end
How about a tape recorder with VOX on the receiver? I have done this with a
scanner, like the Bearcat with the recording option to where you can tell it
to record on receive so the tape does not run all the time. At quieter sites
where a weak front end on the receiver will survive, you can get away
Ok, I've been given several frequencies to listen to, prior to
getting a pair assigned.
What troubles me is that my home setup is never going to hear what I
would hear at the repeater site.
I could put the receiver at the repeater site, but then how would I
know what it's doing?
Any ideas?
We used Triton Electronics several years ago. I am not sure if they are
still in
business or not.
Kevin, K9HX
At 07:55 AM 6/5/2005, you wrote:
>Who repairs Cushman service monitor's? It seems my monitor has
>decided to take a dump. Someone once mentioned a place in Chicago, IL
>but not sure t
Rick at Amtronix. I think he has a web site. Try a Google search.
Chuck
WB2EDV
- Original Message -
From: "Mathew Quaife" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2005 8:55 AM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Cushamn Service Monitors: Who Repairs Them
> Who repairs Cushman service
Who repairs Cushman service monitor's? It seems my monitor has
decided to take a dump. Someone once mentioned a place in Chicago, IL
but not sure the name or who it was. Any suggestions. Thanks.
Mathew
Yahoo! Groups Links
<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups
Hi,
I'm searching for some data on the devices in a Motorola UHF Paging system
PA but so far have drawn a blank!
The Motorola semiconductor site has closed and is now redirecting me to
Freescale but I cant find any data there either :-(
The devices are: M1107 and M11L60.
If anyone has any dat
I picked up a UHF HiPro years ago and was not impressed at first. Now, after
having it on the air and connected to a antenna 450 up at the top of a tower I
am impressed. The little thing has been working perfectly for several years.
It is also easier to service, not surface mount technology,
There is tons of equipment out there from the old analog paging days that can
work on the 440 ham band and is simulcast capable. I worked on a 931Mhz
Glenayre system ears ago that was capable of analog voice simulcast and it
worked well. A great simulcast 440 ham system could be put together if
Yes, Jameco $20 works great.
www.jameco.com
LarryEric Lemmon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Ed,Amphenol, AMP, and RF Industries make good-quality crimp handles anddies. The dies you need depend on the cable size as well as theconnector. Generally, 0.068", 0.100", and 0.128" dies cover most contact
You may want to search Prodel Ecos
This Italian system is the best I have heard in the
working enviroment.
Two methods -landline with high stability chrystal
ovens or the GPS method.Later wins hands down.
Regards
Bardley Glen
--- Mike Morris <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> At 05:22 PM 6/4/05, yo
Ed,
Amphenol, AMP, and RF Industries make good-quality crimp handles and
dies. The dies you need depend on the cable size as well as the
connector. Generally, 0.068", 0.100", and 0.128" dies cover most contact
pins, while 0.213" and 0.429" dies cover most ferrules. If you do a lot
of connector
- Original Message -
From: "mch" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Saturday, June 04, 2005 9:50 PM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] HJ9-50 loss
> Why is that? Does the feedline start acting like an antenna (or dummy
> load) when the conductors are 1/4 wavelength apart or something?
>
> Joe
Hello Everyone
I am in need of a crimp tool for uhf and n connectors; anyone
point me in the right direction for aquiring one or have one they want
to sell contact me off list if you do
thanks
Ed VA6EF
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