Ian I beleive I have thisI am away until next week, email me then if you
still need it
Jerry VE3 EXT
Ian,
The DTMF mike for the MCX1000 may be close enough in design to be helpful.
or
http://tinyurl.com/yelbclq
73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of va2ir
Sent: Sunday, December 27, 2009 4
Slightly off the topic, but I need a schematic for a Moto TT mic, model
VMN1023A.
I want to eliminate the TX delay after the last tone, so I can hear the
repeater acknowledge my commands.
Thanks
Ian
VA2IR
well
i can read all those bad news and in my area i could use an UHF repeater for
experimentation here on VOIP and more maybe.
It's too bad again.
we are near by the Internet but far from mail ,
73/s all
best 2010 to all and your project.
gervais ve2ckn
From: va...@securenet.net
Sent:
Thanx to all who responded to this thread. We have some excellent ideas to
chew on.
Laryn K8TVZ
On Dec 26, 2009, at 9:53 PM, railtrailbiker wrote:
> Hi:
>
> Are there any current or former repeater owners/operators out there who have
> recently taken a repeater off the air on a permanent basis?
>
> If so, what were your reasons?
>
> Tony
Yes,
Here's the stories...
The club had the
Hi Bob, I wish you luck in finding a site. I had one for 15+ years, when the
owner of the building sold the use of the roof to a cell phone company for big
bucks. I am in the same boat, but since I have found that most sites and their
access are political.
de KM3W Paul
_
In my area there have been several repeaters taken off the air for various
reasons. Mostly for non use. There were a few "super repeaters" that covered a
wide area, but for some reason, even they don't get much use anymore. I guess
Nextel and the like killed them. Its funny...there is a universi
>> Are there any current or former repeater owners/
>> operators out there who have recently taken a
>> repeater off the air on a permanent basis?
>> If so, what were your reasons?
Yeah, it happens all the time...
> I have taken at least 3 amateur radio repeaters
> off the air in the last
The 70-1052A is used to program the 70-045 / 70-065 /
70-165 / 70-265 / 70-166 / 70-266 series portables.
s.
> Matt Harker wrote:
>
> I used to program Midland radios but it's been almost 15 years.
>
> Are you looking for the eprom oven and burner for the old syntech series or,
> are you l
At 12/26/2009 20:53, you wrote:
>Hi:
>
>Are there any current or former repeater owners/operators out there who
>have recently taken a repeater off the air on a permanent basis?
>
>If so, what were your reasons?
I lost a site for one of my repeaters a couple of years ago. It's sitting
in my gar
I was entrusted with our 440 machine. Our club has dwindled down to very few
members and we lost 2 good sites, one to the city and the other due to a club
member becoming SK. So, I have the repeater at my home qth, so the frequency
pair won't be grabbed up. Here in distinctland, where there is z
I have taken at least 3 amateur radio repeaters off the air in the last two
years. These
repeaters where all located in a large metropolitaian area ( 3 million
residents).
2 meters - This was a repeater used for user access to a multi-state repeater
linking
system. - Reason - No supp
I restored a Honda elsinore some time ago.
It had a magnesium cover plate on one side of the engine/sprocket.
Was kinda weird and not cheap to replace.
=]
Kb0wlf
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of kevin valentino
Sent: Sunday, December
aluminum can be "cast" as well as "drawn". the drawn type is usually thin, with
respect to the cooling fins, where a cast type can be just about any size.
aluminum is the most common metal for use as a heatsink as it has a very high
temp coefficient, is easy to machine, and is cost effective fr
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