That I am not sure... I am going to be picking up this equipment sometime this week and have to haul it home before I can check it out. All my knowledge thus far is what I have heard from 2 different GE Radio guys on the phone...Thanks! Chuck Kelsey [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Is the
I am looking at acquiring a GE Master II UHF Base station. This is a 300
watt solid state transmitter, which how I understand it, has 2 PAs running
in parallel.
It's actually 200 watts, and yes, there are two final PA's, each capable
of 100 watts output, that are combined. However, each final
to help keep them cool.
Charles Miller, WD5EEH
- Original Message -
From: Steve Rubeck [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, February 04, 2006 1:08 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Mastr II UHF Base Station
Hello ALL -
I am looking at acquiring a GE
Hello ALL -I am looking at acquiring a GE Master II UHF Base station. This is a 300 watt solid state transmitter, which how I understand it, has 2 PAs running in parallel. I am planning to convert this to repeater use, and use it as a main transmitter, and bring other receive sites in
Its been a while,but from what I remember-no! They use one PA to drive
two more which only have the finals and Wilkinson combiners,so they wont
work stand-alone.Nice find though,I'd use it as is,but prepare to watch
your electric meter spin a lot faster!!! 73,Lee
Steve Rubeck wrote:
Hello
I had access to a Motorola MSR2000 some time back. The only way
/\/\ would ship it was at 75 watts output ... the station license
said 20 watts.
The PA deck consisted of one PA transistor associated microstrip
circuitry driving three more in paralle. Bypassing the three and
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