You have to keep in mind that they chose 120 degree shift because they 
had problems with 180 degree shift breaking reeds. 120 degree shift 
stops them at a softer rate and increases longevity.

The other manufacturers didn't care because they weren't around 
pre-microprocessor based decoding (they didn't have reed-based 
decoders), and probably rather liked the idea of making Motorola look 
bad by breaking reeds in Motorola equipment.

Joe M.

wd8chl wrote:
> Paul Dumdie wrote:
>> I have a TKR-750 repeater and like it. My only issue is that I use
>> Motorola Portables and keep getting a squelch crash. What have you
>> guys setting the setting for the reverse burst at to get rid of the
>> squelch crash?
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
> 
> Assuming you mean you have Motorolas that have the switch in software, 
> Kenwood and virtually everyone else in the world uses 180-degree shift 
> for rev burst, so whatever that setting is.
> Moto uses 120-degree shift, and nearly no one else does.
> 
> 
> 
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