So do I.  12 chassis in all.  Some PAs.  No power supplies or cabinets.
Many cards.

These are "Community Repeaters" - designed for multiple PL access, such as
GMRS, etc.

 

Mail direct to: 

n9wys <(at)> ameritech <(dot)> net for info.

 

Mark - N9WYS

 

From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com  On Behalf Of Maire-Radios

 

FYI  have a number UHF 460 to 470 band Unified chassis repeaters  for sale
very low cost   some working some for parts.

 

John

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Kevin Custer <mailto:kug...@kuggie.com>  

To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 

Sent: Monday, February 16, 2009 5:54 PM

Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Micor Repeater

 

Ralph S. Turk wrote: 

Kevin
Unified Chassis meaning TX on top
Control Shelf and Rx etc on bottom.


Most chassis' were set-up this way, so please read on - and answer again.

A Unified Chassis is a chassis that is not made up of separate rack-mounted
units.  The Non Unified Chassis is exactly what it says it is.  Each of the
units (the TX, control shelf, and RX) are separate and connected together
electrically with a 50 conductor ribbon cable.  The Unified Chassis has a
Back-Plane Board that is tall enough to 'reach' the TX and RX compartments,
and no ribbon cable exists.

The Unified Chassis is easily identified as having "sloping" covers on the
TX and RX.
Here's a picture of a Unified Chassis:
 <http://www.kuggie.com/ahra/pix/DSC00027.jpg>
<http://www.kuggie.com/ahra/pix/DSC00027.jpg>

Thanks,
Kevin

 

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