Landfill - For sure! (If they're not working) These have the UHF frequency 
still adhered to the battery panel, so I have very strong reason to beleive 
these are UHF and not VHF hiding in a UHF case. Doesnt appear to be tampered 
with or pry  marks indicating it was opened before. (Thank goodness). I really 
hope I dont have to PAY anyone to take these off my hands in the future!

I just noticed I *STILL* have my Tall Radius P50+ with a numeric touchpad still 
sitting on my shelf I thought I got rid of MONTHS ago. Its come back to haunt 
me!! (Anyone want it?) :)

John Hymes
La Rue Communications
10 S. Aurora Street
Stockton, CA 95202
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: wd8chl 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, April 09, 2010 7:20 AM
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Motorola Radius P50


    
  On 4/8/2010 3:18 PM, La Rue Communications wrote:
  > Two questions on this unit.
  >
  > 1) Does anyone know the nomenclature for this? I have checked out
  > several different versions, including one that was built for
  > assignments dated after 3/10/02. I tried to check it out with it,
  > however, it doesnt match up when it came to the power level code. So
  > I scrapped that one. Google searches turn up a pair of them listed on
  > eBay for 250 bucks. (Who are they kidding?)

  heh...

  > Model number is H (For Handheld) 44GNU1120BN. I beleive it is a UHF,
  > but I would like to know the rest of the specs, spacing, packages,
  > etc.

  well, the second '4' means UHF, so yes, unless someone put a VHF radio 
  in a UHF case...

  > 2) One the same units, I have a "Tall" one and a "Short" one. Battery
  > sizes are clearly the differing factor. Does that mean Power levels
  > come into play here?

  <scratches head> Isn't a P50 the cheapy xtal radio from the early 90's? 
  Maybe 4-channel tops? If so, the 'tall' vs. 'short' was carrier squelch 
  vs. PL/DPL. So yes, that means converting a CSQ radio to PL means 
  changing the case...
  And no, these are NOT narrowbnad compatible, so they have no value in 
  Part 90. And they were pretty cheap, flimsy radios, hard to work on, 
  easy to break, I wouldn't take one for free...
  Land fill...



  

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