LTR indeed does not use a dedicated control channel like EDACS or PP - 
control is distributed.  Subscriber units are programmed to seek a HOME 
repeater and if it is not available (busy channel inhibit) the radios 
homed to that repeater are dead.  When the home repeater is servicing a 
call it at the same time tells subscriber units to find a new home on 
RPT #X and will continue to send that data word even after the user on 
the home repeater is finished, so long as the transmission continues on 
the new home to service late entry.

LTR is considered by the FCC as centralized trunking.

De-Centralized trunking lets mobile units decide when to transmit.  LTR 
does not have a provision for the mobile radios not to transmit on a 
busy channel.  In centralized trunking, the site orchestrates mobile 
transmissions.

But I may be wrong,

Steve NU5D



Jim wrote:
> Steve S. Bosshard (NU5D) wrote:
>   
>> Kinda off track for a Ham repeater group, but been there done that.  
>> Mine was due to loss of 800 SMR channels when they were easy to come by, 
>> then later impossible to get due to freezes.
>>
>> Exclusivity.  You need at least one repeater that has exclusive use in a 
>> service area because LTR uses centralized control and the HOME repeater 
>> needs to be exclusive. 
>>     
>
> Not quite true. LTR does not use a control channel, and does not 
> transmit continuously, however, if you do not have exclusivity on a 
> channel-ANY channel-you need a monitor rx on the output cross-connected 
> so that it prevents that channel from keying if it hears other traffic.
>
>
>   Having the second repeater also exclusive is a
>   
>> big plus.  Next narrowband vs wideband.  Depending on location you may 
>> be narrow band - that seems to work OK.
>>     
>
> 512 MHz and down to 136 or whatever will all be narrowband by 2013 
> anyway, except I haven't seen provisions for it for part 95 (GMRS) yet, 
> so it will likely be exempt.
>
>   

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