Do an ebay search for "ge mastr".  You will find a large number of GE 
Base stations at the present time that can be operated as repeaters 
listed.

73 - Jim  W5ZIT


-----Original Message-----
From: lou_c1357 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Tue, 10 Jul 2007 6:43 am
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Re: Hello...






All,

Thanks for the comments... Looks like I have plenty to research and
keep me busy for a while.

I notice alot of people here use converted comercial radios for
repeaters. How available are these?? A quick search on e-bay did
not show a large number of hits... but maybe the availability is
cyclical...

Thanks again,

Lou

--- In Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com, Nate Duehr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi Lou,
>
> I'll throw out my wishes for you to have fun and enjoy building a
> repeater, but I'll also throw up in the air my usual comment to all
> budding repeater-builder type folks...
>
> Find a local club that needs help. There's ALWAYS someone locally
that
> needs help with an existing repeater or system! (Or move to
Denver,
> we'll put you to work!!)
>
> Repeaters need maintenance, not a lot, if they're built right, but
> there's always "something" to be done/checked every year or so.
>
> And every few years, you might have some tower/antenna work to do,
and
> every few other years maybe some measurements to take critically
with
> good test gear to see if the repeater is still performing to
baseline
> specifications that you measured a few years before that... and...
> things fail... or get blown up by lightning...
>
> Well, the list goes on and on... it never stops, really. After you
get
> picky about audio you can start obsessing about that, and come up
with a
> project list twice as long and difficult as the "just get it on the
air
> and working" list! There's always something to analyze, think
about,
> and try to make better... without making it worse.
>
> Many clubs/organizations are short of qualified folks to work on
their
> systems. There's lots of "radio operators" out there, happy to use
the
> systems, but the number of techs who'll work on them -- it is a
very
> small group of people in most populated areas. In rural areas, you
> really might find 3-4 people total who REALLY do repeaters right.
>
> (Hint: Pick repeaters in your area that seem to have better
performance
> than others in the area and then look up the callsign. Find out
who
> owns/operates it and approach those people. FIND THOSE techs...
they
> "did it right".)
>
> If you read up on EVERYTHING you find at the Repeater-Builder
website
> about your club/local organization's repeaters, and all the general
> information there -- and there's a LOT!...
>
> Then start asking around to find out who the REAL repeater techs
are in
> your local organizations (hint: it's not always who talks about it
the
> most on the air!), you'll probably find some of the best people
you've
> ever met in Ham Radio.
>
> Try to meet a few people that do this stuff... get a feel for the
local
> "community" of repeater builders. Many people think the folks in
charge
> of certain clubs don't work with other clubs in the area, and
often --
> although not always -- this isn't true. Most of the folks doing
this
> stuff do know and work with each other on problems, even if their
clubs
> "compete".
>
> Many repeater builder types are willing to Elmer new folks along in
> return for some help on their systems. NOT ALL are, though -- some
are
> crotchety old grumpy coots who won't talk to anyone. Don't worry
about
> it, all aspects of this hobby have both types. (GRIN)
>
> And their biggest "turn-off" will be if you show up once, and never
come
> back. Make a commitment to stick around for a while, you'll learn
some
> interesting things. Repeaters are fairly different from many types
of
> Amateur Radio... a "specialty" if you will, within the hobby. And
can
> be quite challenging to get "right".
>
> Showing someone the ropes kinda requires a commitment from both
sides
> that is a little notch above this just being a "hobby". Especially
if a
> lot of folks are counting on a particular repeater or repeater
system.
>
> Okay, off the soap box... plenty of well-wishers here, and folks
who'll
> answer questions. Off ya go! Find a repeater that needs fixing!
>
> (By the way, no harm done building a typical "back-yard" repeater
to do
> some learning. Hopefully your area has some frequency pairs set
aside
> for "experimentation" and/or "non-protected" use. Those are a
great
> open "playground" where you can learn a lot, and not have to deal
with
> coordinating the repeater at first... just be courteous to others
also
> using those pairs, if your area has them.)
>
> Nate WY0X
>


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