> "N9WYS" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I have an MSR2000 on 444.550 for the 
> local ham club / county EMA.  The PA (a
> 110W model) is out again.  We just had 
> this repaired by the local Motorola
> shop, with whom we've had very good 
> results from in the past.  We're running
> the PA at about 80W, 

Not good, 60 watts max for typical repeater 
operation is about as far as I'd push it. 
You probably would not have noticed the 
repeater doing 40 to 60 watts vs 80.  

> so I'm thinking we didn't "burn it up", 
> but I can't help but wonder if there 
> is anything inherently wrong with the 
> MSR2000 PA for UHF.  

There is, do you have an A or B version 
(model number suffix at the end)? 

> This is the third time the PA has failed 
> in this particular machine in about a 
> 2-year time frame. 

You've got more than a PA problem. Possible 
high reflected power or lock to talk users. 
Do you have a circulator following the 
transmitter? 

> (This was a repeater originally tuned
> for 460 MHZ, and brought down to the ham 
> band.) 

And how was that done..? 

> This particular machine has been a pain in 
> the @$% - RX sensitivity isn't what it should 
> be, 

What is it..?  You might have some lightning 
damage in the receiver front end.  One of the 
Canadian guys mentioned this problem a month or 
two back. 

> PA keeps going out, etc. Seems like we're up 
> at the site every couple of months do
> make some sort of repair on it.
> I'm wondering if we should just cut our 
> losses and get another machine, or
> should I keep plugging away at this repeater? 
> If we do decide to chuck it, how much can I 
> expect to spend to get a comparable replacement 
> - we use this machine during severe weather 
> season for forwarding reports to the NWS, and
> it's open other times.  We want to add remote 
> RX sites (you've probably seen my inquiries 
> about those in the past) but I don't want to 
> start adding remote RX sites until I get the 
> main repeater working reliably.
> I'm open to suggestions...
> Thanks,
> Mark - N9WYS 

I can't tell you what is best for your needs, but 
the PA issue is probably bigger than just that 
one part (the power amplifier). A circulator and 
a fan would be a godsend if you must run the 80 
power level in the stock PA.  
You can repair it again, buy an $1100.00 drop in 
replacement from TPL or sub something else in. I've 
done all three, now I'm making my own predriver 
units for larger trailing PA's. 

All things considered, a working MSR is a good unit. 

cheers
skipp 
skipp025 at yahoo.com 
www.radiowrench.com 





 
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