e to know why you believe that your MSR2000 station is not an
ordinary, narrow-band machine.
73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
-Original Message-
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] MSR 2000 repeater NFM conversion
At 03:00 PM 06/19/07, you wrote:
>Greetings to
At 03:00 PM 06/19/07, you wrote:
>Greetings to the group.
>
>I have an MSR 2000 repeater. It is vhf and currently wide band (15
>KHz). It is using channel elements T KXN1095A and R KXN1112AA. I have
>read that there is conversion to make this NFM (5KHz) spacing.
>However, I can't seem to find th
The receive IF filter will have to be changed and the transmitter deviation
changed. There are kits to change the filters. This would probably not be
type accepted for commercial narrow band use. It would be fine for services
that do not require type acceptance, ie amateur radio.
73
Glenn
WB4U
Try Communications Specialists www.com-spec.com/narrow.htm . They have a
number of kits for narrow-banding popular radios, as well as the individual
ceramic and crystal filters if you want to "roll your own"... I purchased
their Mitrek kit for my GMRS repeater conversion, as well as the indivi
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