Exactly my thoughts , I would rather use a 30 watt rpt which is clean and 
sensitive than a deaf 250 watt widebander..
 around these parts our rpt average less than 50 watts and can be heard  well 
considerable distances 
 (with lower power which in of it's self is a result of remote locations)

To: [email protected]
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 19 Oct 2007 22:49:14 -0600
Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Re: TPL amplifier - aka repeater operation at 
the 250 watt power lev
















  


    
            


I 
guess it's a different world out here in the wild wild west.  Very few 
machines run more than 30 watts.  Of course with our 10,000+ foot granite 
towers we don't need any more.  Some machines have 100+ mile (radius) 
coverage.
 
 
Keith McQueen
801-224-9460
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 

  
  -----Original Message-----
From: 
  [email protected] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  On Behalf Of TGundo 2003
Sent: Friday, October 19, 2007 8:08 
  PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: 
  [Repeater-Builder] Re: TPL amplifier - aka repeater operation at the 250 watt 
  power lev


  
  
  Imagine the fun we have at the Illinois Repeater Association meetings 
  between the "Chicago" and "Downstate" guys? It's the same with politics too 
  ;)
   
  Well, the last few meetings have been good, thanks greatly in part to the 
  supurb job the IRA has done.
   
  Anyways, I a "downstate Chicago" guy, I live in the farmfields 45 miles 
  south of the city. While I will not argue that there are some alligator 
  systems in the city...and suburbs....
   
  Be careful of acousing any of those machines of being "gluttons". I'm not 
  sure which machines you had in mind, but probably the widest coverage 2m 
  machine in the city is CFMC on 146.76. They have several reciever sites, and 
  run modest power off one of the tallest buildings in the city- 45 miles away 
  here at my qth running around mobile they are usually between 1/2 and full 
  scale on an icom with a 5/8 nmo on the roof of the surburban. Of course I can 
  access the system full quieting, so it's bretty balanced for the users in the 
  greater metro area.
   
  Now- during a band opening I'm sure it can put out a good footprint. FYI- 
  during an average opening in the morning or evining during the summer we can 
  hear the downstate repeaters just fine as well. The corn fields don't 
  stop much, the city is a different story. One of my uhf systems is in the 
  cornfields south of the city, and it plays much farther to the south than it 
  does to the north into the city. (omni antenna on top of a 300' 
  tower) 
   
  In comparason- one of the largest UHF systems in chicago, 16 recieve 
  sites last I heard, is on one of the tallest buildings as well, and for the 
  last few years has been running on exciter power (4-5 watts) that is 
  being divided to three panel antennas (to put the footprint away from the 
  lake), and on 1/3 or exciter power at that height from the panel antenna in 
  any given direction it's very common to hear the output 70-80 miles away on a 
  mobile with average conditions. Im sure on a good base 100+ miles is 
  pretty easy, and during an opening, well, who knows. Does that make them a 
  glutton? If you could put your antenna at 1300' AGL with a relativly short 
  feed line, wouldn't you?
   
  There are issues in the metro areas & city with building 
  penetration, intermod & general high levels of rf garbage, & 
  topography around the city with a few "holes" and river valleys where it can 
  be hard to recieve the talkout from the city. Skipp covered the rest well in 
  his response. If there are specific machines you notice, please contact me 
  directly, I would like to know which ones. I have a pretty good knowledge, 
and 
  know people who have more knowledge of many of the boxes here, maybe I 
  could help research this for you.
   
  I would just be careful of the glutton accousations, that's all.
   
  73
  Tom
  W9SRV
   
   
   
   
   
  

Al Wolfe <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
  
> 
    Having a very high-level flamethrower repeater around is not only
> a 
    great communications resource... if the hardware operates well
> it's 
    also impressive on your technical resume and a lot of fun to
> 
    operate.

So in other words, it's just an ego trip. These repeaters 
    are commonly 
known as Alligators.

We in downstate Illinois suffer 
    from the two meter glut of RF out of 
Chicago. There they have repeaters 
    there with dozens of receiver sites and 
multi-kilowatt ERP transmitters, 
    usually running about half scale 150 miles 
away. But we cannot get into 
    their systems running legal power. But they say 
they have "balanced 
    systems"? What a crock!

If a repeater is full scale and I can't get 
    into it with 150 watts then 
something is very wrong!

Al, K9SI 
    






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