DCFluX wrote:

> What you should do is have the remote reciever have a VHF transmitter
> into the VHF sides RX.  What you do then is run the remote RX on the
> opposite offset to the repeater.  For example when the user wants to
> come in on the remote, he switches to the + offset instead of -.
> 
> You would need to build a VHF repeater with a 1.2 MHz split, allowing
> you to use commonly avalible commercial duplexers meant for 1.5 MHz
> splits with a little less attenuation. Or run the transmitter into a
> beam aimed back at the repeater and the RX on a Omni.
> 
> Although the Federales don't like auxilliary use on 2M, so you will
> either need to call it a remote base, or transmit into your UHF side
> instead and keep the VHF rx still on the opposite offset,

Generally not a good idea-you wind up with a repeater input on a simplex 
frequency, or another repeater output, or possibly in the satellite band 
(145.80-146.00). A few wind up on other repeater inputs (145.41-145.49 
give you 146.01-146.09).
-- 
Jim Barbour
WD8CHL





 
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