Eric and Joe,
Thank you for your replies. Assuming this repeater is in functioning
(or near-functioning order) on its current frequency (464.050), is it
possible to take it down to amateur frequencies? From what I read on
the repeater-builder website, it seems like the procedure
] On Behalf Of MCH
Sent: Saturday, February 02, 2008 9:48 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Micor Repeater - ID?
Actually, the 'RC' indicates a Micor Unified Chassis
and the 'B' indicates 120V AC Power source.
And the '1' listed as N/A means 25 kHz channel spacing
Mike,
I think you need to know the following:
The receiver is in the bottom of the unified chassis. It has a BNC
connector, you should find that on the left hand side facing from the
rear. The un-labled N (F) connector by the silver box is the
transmitter output. Commercial repeaters are
Mike,
The C64RCB-3105AT (I'm pretty sure the Y is actually a T) station is
described as:
C = Compa Station
64 = 75 watt output in the UHF band
RCB = Continuous Duty PA
3 = PL Tone-Coded Squelch
1 = N/A
0 = 1 TX and 1 RX
5 = DC Remote Control
AT = Repeater Station
You can get more information by
Actually, the 'RC' indicates a Micor Unified Chassis
and the 'B' indicates 120V AC Power source.
And the '1' listed as N/A means 25 kHz channel spacing for that band.
Joe M.
Eric Lemmon wrote:
Mike,
The C64RCB-3105AT (I'm pretty sure the Y is actually a T) station is
described as:
C =
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