Texas had, not sure if they are still there after the VHF FM Society has been changing things without membership voting on it, allocated several crossband pairs for such use.
In any case, TSQ should be use to prevent lock up and interference. As well as lowest power needed...typical ham rigs cannot handle broadband at full power anyway and will tend to burn up the PA if used at high or even medium power levels in xband rptr mode On Mon, Jun 8, 2020, 8:22 AM Rob KC5RET via BVARC <[email protected]> wrote: > Hello all, > > Was reading one of my facebook groups today and there was a ham looking to > setup a small low powered crossband repeater so he could communicate > reliably with a friend, but he wasn't sure what to look for. > > I'm pretty sure he needs a set of "Non-coordinated crossband repeater pair > frequencies." > > Where would someone look for such a thing? I performed a google search > and didn't find a consensus. > > My guess was, even though it would be a non coordinated repeater, he would > need to check with the repeater coordinator in his area, to find out what > those frequencies would be. > > Thoughts? > > 73, Rob, KC5RET EM20KE > ________________________________________________ > Brazos Valley Amateur Radio Club > > BVARC mailing list > [email protected] > http://mail.bvarc.org/mailman/listinfo/bvarc_bvarc.org >
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