Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing this board

2010-08-04 Thread wd8chl
On 8/4/2010 12:04 AM, Steve Denbow wrote:

 Hello Group!

 I have this board (the one on the RIGHT) in a high band MASTR II
 station operating as a 2M repeater.  The board on the LEFT is out of
 a sister station, which I have information on.  I can not find
 information on this board (RIGHT) doing a search of the LBI's on the
 RB site.  A Google search only comes up with a MASTR Exec II
 vehicular repeater, which none of the boards in it resemble this
 board.  It appears to have a preamp built into it, and is part of the
 receiver IF section, but that's about all I can figure out looking at
 it.  Any help would be appreciated!  Thanks in advance!

 Steve KD8BIW KD8BIW/R 224.580 PL 110.9 Sponsors: KA8GKT, KD8FTR,
 KD8IYX http://www.kd8biw.com


My first thought was a DFE (Dual-Front End), but then I saw the crystal 
filters, so it is something in the IF region. Noise blanker???


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing this board

2010-08-04 Thread dmurman
Don't know the LBI but the one on the right is the mixer board with noise 
blanker. Does the same as the one on the left except it has the noise blanker. 
Normally I have seen these in Lo-VHF stations but were also made for Hi-VHF. 


David

Aug 4, 2010 04:14:25 AM, Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com wrote:

  



Hello Group!
 
I have this board (the one on the RIGHT) in a high band MASTR II station 
operating as a 2M repeater.  The board on the LEFT is out of a sister station, 
which I have information on.  I can not find information on this board (RIGHT) 
doing a search of the LBI's on the RB site.  A Google search only comes up with 
a MASTR Exec II vehicular repeater, which none of the boards in it resemble 
this board.  It appears to have a preamp built into it, and is part of the 
receiver IF section, but that's about all I can figure out looking at it.  Any 
help would be appreciated!  Thanks in advance!

Steve KD8BIW
KD8BIW/R 224.580 PL 110.9
Sponsors: KA8GKT, KD8FTR, KD8IYX
http://www.kd8biw.com
 
  






Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing this board

2010-08-04 Thread Chuck Kelsey
I believe it may be this:

http://www.repeater-builder.com/ge/lbi-library/lbi-4982c.pdf

Chuck
WB2EDV


  - Original Message - 
  From: Steve Denbow 
  To: repeater-builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, August 04, 2010 12:04 AM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing this board




  Hello Group!
   
  I have this board (the one on the RIGHT) in a high band MASTR II station 
operating as a 2M repeater.  The board on the LEFT is out of a sister station, 
which I have information on.  I can not find information on this board (RIGHT) 
doing a search of the LBI's on the RB site.  A Google search only comes up with 
a MASTR Exec II vehicular repeater, which none of the boards in it resemble 
this board.  It appears to have a preamp built into it, and is part of the 
receiver IF section, but that's about all I can figure out looking at it.  Any 
help would be appreciated!  Thanks in advance!

  Steve KD8BIW
  KD8BIW/R 224.580 PL 110.9
  Sponsors: KA8GKT, KD8FTR, KD8IYX
  http://www.kd8biw.com
   






  


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10:22:00


RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing this board

2010-08-04 Thread Kenneth Cook
I did a little research last night and all I could come up with was a REMIX
NB. It called for LDI-4984. The LBI is nothing like the item shown. A little
more research called for LBI-4778 (which I couldn't find) and called it a
138-174 MHz Oscillator Multiplex board.

Sorry I could not be of any help.

 

Hey Steve, how is Ashland?

 

Kenneth Cook, W8DZN

W8DZN Repeaters in Bucyrus, Ohio

Repeaters 147.165 PL88.5  442.525 PL88.5

 

  _  

From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of wd8chl
Sent: Wednesday, August 04, 2010 8:56 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing this board

 

  

On 8/4/2010 12:04 AM, Steve Denbow wrote:

 Hello Group!

 I have this board (the one on the RIGHT) in a high band MASTR II
 station operating as a 2M repeater. The board on the LEFT is out of
 a sister station, which I have information on. I can not find
 information on this board (RIGHT) doing a search of the LBI's on the
 RB site. A Google search only comes up with a MASTR Exec II
 vehicular repeater, which none of the boards in it resemble this
 board. It appears to have a preamp built into it, and is part of the
 receiver IF section, but that's about all I can figure out looking at
 it. Any help would be appreciated! Thanks in advance!

 Steve KD8BIW KD8BIW/R 224.580 PL 110.9 Sponsors: KA8GKT, KD8FTR,
 KD8IYX http://www.kd8biw.com

My first thought was a DFE (Dual-Front End), but then I saw the crystal 
filters, so it is something in the IF region. Noise blanker???





Re: [Repeater-Builder] help and suggestions interference issues

2010-07-04 Thread Doug Bade
If it is in fact D-Star...I would think the most likely cause would be 
someone analog-ly crossband repeating from a D-Star frequency into your 
input with the needed ctcss. To my knowledge, no Icom D-Star radio 
allows for ctcss along with the data as it would corrupt it.
It could be done with a hybrid connection between digital and an analog 
programmed radio however I would say it would be intentionally malicious 
at that point as ctcss and D-Star do not mix..


Here is a link to an MP3 of what D-Star sounds like on an analog receiver.
http://www.w2sjw.com/sounds/D-STAR.mp3

Doug
KD8B

terry_wx3m wrote:
 

DSTAR is totally foreign to me. I can't think of anyone in the 
immediate area that even has a DSTAR capable radio.


We are experiencing some interference on the input to one of our club 
repeaters. What baffles me is that the repeater is in PL (123.0). Is 
it possible that a DSTAR user in a neighboring area is inadvertently 
transmitting PL and getting into our machine?


Also it would GREATLY help if someone had the capability of making me 
a short .wav clip of what DSTAR sounds like on an analog receiver.


Thanks
Terry
wx3m.te...@gmail.com mailto:wx3m.terry%40gmail.com

.






Re: [Repeater-Builder] help and suggestions interference issues

2010-07-04 Thread Doug Hutchison
Yes Doug,

Sent a recording off list but you have I think hit the nail on the head 
as am sure CTCSS is not applicable to D-Star as you say. A strong D-Star 
signal would get into the RX though, despite CTCSS, I think but cannot 
prove it as no D-Star here.

Doug - GM7SVK


On 04/07/2010 17:57:16, Doug Bade (k...@thebades.net) wrote:
  If it is in fact D-Star...I would think the most likely cause would be
  someone analog-ly crossband repeating from a D-Star frequency into your
  input with the needed ctcss. To my knowledge, no Icom D-Star radio 
allows
  for ctcss along with the data as it would corrupt it.
  It could be done with a hybrid connection between digital and an analog
  programmed radio however I would say it would be intentionally malicious
  at that point as ctcss and D-Star do not mix..
 
  Here is a link to an MP3 of what D-Star sounds like on an analog 
receiver.
 
  http://www.w2sjw.com/sounds/D-STAR.mp3 [link: www.w2sjw.com/sounds/D-
  STAR.mp3]
 
  Doug
  KD8B
 
  terry_wx3m wrote:
  DSTAR is totally foreign to me. I can't think of anyone in the 
immediate area that even has a DSTAR capable radio.
 
  We are experiencing some interference on the input to one of our club 
repeaters. What baffles me is that the repeater is in PL (123.0). Is it 
possible that a DSTAR user in a neighboring area is inadvertently 
transmitting PL and getting into our machine?
 
  Also it would GREATLY help if someone had the capability of making me 
a short .wav clip of what DSTAR sounds like on an analog receiver.
 
  Thanks
  Terry
  wx3m.te...@gmail.com [link: mailto:


Re: [Repeater-Builder] help and suggestions interference issues

2010-07-04 Thread Oz-in-DFW


On 7/4/2010 11:25 AM, terry_wx3m wrote:
  

 DSTAR is totally foreign to me. I can't think of anyone in the
 immediate area that even has a DSTAR capable radio.

 We are experiencing some interference on the input to one of our club
 repeaters. What baffles me is that the repeater is in PL (123.0). Is
 it possible that a DSTAR user in a neighboring area is inadvertently
 transmitting PL and getting into our machine?

 Also it would GREATLY help if someone had the capability of making me
 a short .wav clip of what DSTAR sounds like on an analog receiver.

 Thanks
 Terry
 wx3m.te...@gmail.com mailto:wx3m.terry%40gmail.com

DStar doesn't use CTCSS (PL) and even if it did you would not 'hear'
anything on an analog radio.  If your problem really involves DStar,
what /could/ happen is:

   1. A DStar signal with enough energy in the 123 hz decoder to trip
  the radio (not too likely I think.)
   2. A mix that involves a DStar radio and an analog radio running
  CTCSS (what I would bet on.)

What makes you think a DStar radio is the interference source?

-- 
mailto:o...@ozindfw.net
Oz
POB 93167 
Southlake, TX 76092 (Near DFW Airport) 






RE: [Repeater-Builder] help and suggestions interference issues

2010-07-04 Thread David Murman
Had an issue also with a dstar repeater. Seems that the repeater was co
located with another analog repeater and when both transmitters came up I
would see and hear the dstar signal on the input of my repeater. The two
transmitters were mixing in a filter on the dstar antenna. Operators of the
dstar repeater made adjustments to the filter and no longer see or hear the
repeater. We are also using pl 123.0 and the dstar signal was keying the
transmitter.

Not sure why as the other transmitter is using a different pl tone.

 

 

 

David

 

From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of terry_wx3m
Sent: Sunday, July 04, 2010 11:25 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] help and suggestions interference issues

 

  

DSTAR is totally foreign to me. I can't think of anyone in the immediate
area that even has a DSTAR capable radio.

We are experiencing some interference on the input to one of our club
repeaters. What baffles me is that the repeater is in PL (123.0). Is it
possible that a DSTAR user in a neighboring area is inadvertently
transmitting PL and getting into our machine?

Also it would GREATLY help if someone had the capability of making me a
short .wav clip of what DSTAR sounds like on an analog receiver.

Thanks
Terry
wx3m.te...@gmail.com mailto:wx3m.terry%40gmail.com 





Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help Identifying a Motorola PA

2010-06-16 Thread La Rue Communications
According to my model breakdown sheet its a VHF 144-174 MHz PA. If its like the 
PAs we have - they would be somewhere in the neighborhood of 105W output power.

John Hymes
La Rue Communications
10 S. Aurora Street
Stockton, CA 95202
http://tinyurl.com/2dtngmn
  - Original Message - 
  From: nativeMT 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, June 16, 2010 1:58 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help Identifying a Motorola PA



  I was given a PA with a part number TLD2772A.

  The unit looks to be a rack mount PA with RG142 w/ n connectors for both 
input and output. 

  The circuit board is unique in that it is ceramic substrate with laser etched 
film resistors and surface mount parts. The output transistor is a single 
SRF-4019.

  Can anyone give me information on this PA?

  Thanks,
  Corey



  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help Needed (Guidance and advice) tuning a DB Products Duplexer

2010-05-29 Thread Milt
Josh,

Ed's description for tuning is right on the money.
I would try moving the unit just a slight bit to get used to how it tunes 
before trying to move it over such a wide frequency range.  Once you are 
comfortable with your equipment and how the duplexer tunes, then move it to 
the new amateur frequency.

Milt
N3LTQ


- Original Message -
From: Ed Yoho w6yj_ya...@67hz.net
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, May 29, 2010 12:09 AM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help Needed (Guidance and advice) tuning a 
DB Products Duplexer


 Josh wrote:
 Ok so here's what I've got (I think)

 http://www.n2ckh.com/FORSALE/REPEATERS/DUPLEXERS/DB4076/DSC02678.JPG

 Hamvention special, 4 cavities, appears to be a DB Products 4076 family 
 unit.   My bench tools: HP 8924c w/ Spec Analyzer and Tracking Generator.

 My problem - existing set of cans is tuned for 460~mhz.  I need to bring 
 them down to 443/448.It was my understanding that they would have 
 dual adjustments - one for setting the band pass frequency, one for 
 setting the reject frequency.   Sounds simple.  Except under the 'covers' 
 there is nothing else to adjust... So are they just single frequency pass 
 or notch filters?

 So thats the first question - The second question is - ok , so if they're 
 just single frequency filters, why can't I spin them 'into the right 
 range' as easily as I thought I'd be able to do I've tuned a couple 
 of motorola micor filters on the spec analyzer in the last couple of 
 days, mostly made sense and was smooth as silk... However, after messing 
 with the first can, I'm confused.  Moving the adjustment certainly 
 changes the properties of the notching - but it didnt really move the 
 bandpass around... It mostly changed the shape and depth of the 
 notching - not the frequency.

 What knowledge am I missing - I'm an amateur :)

 Yes I've seen the 'how to tune db products duplexor' doc - but it talks 
 about dual controls, which apparently I don't have.

 Did I buy a piece of junkola?  Teach me obie-wan.

 j



 Josh,

 The large nut tipped rods in the center of each cavity are the pass
 adjustments. Loosen the locking nut at the bottom of each tuning rod and
 turn the shafts clockwise to set the pass responses where you want. Be
 sure to keep them set high and low as they are labeled. Once the pass is
 where you want it, tighten the clamp nuts back down. Then remove the
 small round covers between the N connectors on each cavity and use a
 small screwdriver or metal tipped tuning tool to _carefully_ put the
 notches where they belong. Put the covers back on and enjoy.

 Be sure to put a termination on the side you are not tuning.

 Ed Yoho
 W6YJ



 



 Yahoo! Groups Links






Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help Needed (Guidance and advice) tuning a DB Products Duplexer

2010-05-29 Thread Glenn (Butch) Kanvick
Hello Josh.

Look under the caps between the coax connectors.
That should be the notch adjustment.

They may not go that low,but all you can do is try.
Good luck.

Butch, KE7FEL/r

On Fri, May 28, 2010 at 6:53 PM, Josh josh.kit...@gmail.com wrote:



 Ok so here's what I've got (I think)

 http://www.n2ckh.com/FORSALE/REPEATERS/DUPLEXERS/DB4076/DSC02678.JPG

 Hamvention special, 4 cavities, appears to be a DB Products 4076 family
 unit. My bench tools: HP 8924c w/ Spec Analyzer and Tracking Generator.

 My problem - existing set of cans is tuned for 460~mhz. I need to bring
 them down to 443/448. It was my understanding that they would have dual
 adjustments - one for setting the band pass frequency, one for setting the
 reject frequency. Sounds simple. Except under the 'covers' there is nothing
 else to adjust... So are they just single frequency pass or notch filters?

 So thats the first question - The second question is - ok , so if they're
 just single frequency filters, why can't I spin them 'into the right range'
 as easily as I thought I'd be able to do I've tuned a couple of motorola
 micor filters on the spec analyzer in the last couple of days, mostly made
 sense and was smooth as silk... However, after messing with the first can,
 I'm confused. Moving the adjustment certainly changes the properties of the
 notching - but it didnt really move the bandpass around... It mostly changed
 the shape and depth of the notching - not the frequency.

 What knowledge am I missing - I'm an amateur :)

 Yes I've seen the 'how to tune db products duplexor' doc - but it talks
 about dual controls, which apparently I don't have.

 Did I buy a piece of junkola? Teach me obie-wan.

 j

  



RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help Needed (Guidance and advice) tuning a DB Products Duplexer

2010-05-29 Thread Jeff DePolo
 Ok so here's what I've got (I think)
 
 http://www.n2ckh.com/FORSALE/REPEATERS/DUPLEXERS/DB4076/DSC02678.JPG
 
 Hamvention special, 4 cavities, appears to be a DB Products 
 4076 family unit. My bench tools: HP 8924c w/ Spec Analyzer 
 and Tracking Generator.

There was a guy at the Hamvention that had several sets of Decibel
four-cavity window filters, selling for $50 each, which, to the untrained
eye, would look like an older DB4076.  As you said, there would be nothing
in the hole where the capacitor would be in a regular DB4076.  In essecence,
what you have are just plain-jane pass cavities.  

As a second means of confirming that you do, in fact, have a window filter,
is there an antenna tee, or are the four cavities cabled together in
cascade?  If the latter, then you probably have a window filter.

And as a third means of confirming, is there is a label on the front?  If
not, was there any signs of a label having once been there?  If not, then
that's yet one more indication that it isn't a DB4076.

Decibel made two varieties of pass cavities used in window filters in that
era.  One had adjustable loops (less common), the other had fixed loops.  If
your loop connectors have a rectangular chrome plate around them with
insertion loss calibration marks, you have the less-common adjustable ones.
If you just see four philips-head screws and no chromed plate around the
connectors, then yours is not adjustable.

If you have the adjustable type, you could probably use them as a pass-only
duplexer, but with mediocre isolation, even with the insertion loss cranked
up higher than you'd like.  If you have the non-adjustable ones, they have
very tight coupling, so you're not going to get the isolation you'd need for
a repeater.

 Did I buy a piece of junkola? Teach me obie-wan.

Not junk, but maybe not what you were expecting...

--- Jeff WN3A



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help Needed (Guidance and advice) tuning a DB Products Duplexer

2010-05-28 Thread Ed Yoho
Josh wrote:
 Ok so here's what I've got (I think)
 
 http://www.n2ckh.com/FORSALE/REPEATERS/DUPLEXERS/DB4076/DSC02678.JPG
 
 Hamvention special, 4 cavities, appears to be a DB Products 4076 family unit. 
   My bench tools: HP 8924c w/ Spec Analyzer and Tracking Generator.
 
 My problem - existing set of cans is tuned for 460~mhz.  I need to bring them 
 down to 443/448.It was my understanding that they would have dual 
 adjustments - one for setting the band pass frequency, one for setting the 
 reject frequency.   Sounds simple.  Except under the 'covers' there is 
 nothing else to adjust... So are they just single frequency pass or notch 
 filters?
 
 So thats the first question - The second question is - ok , so if they're 
 just single frequency filters, why can't I spin them 'into the right range' 
 as easily as I thought I'd be able to do I've tuned a couple of motorola 
 micor filters on the spec analyzer in the last couple of days, mostly made 
 sense and was smooth as silk... However, after messing with the first can, 
 I'm confused.  Moving the adjustment certainly changes the properties of the 
 notching - but it didnt really move the bandpass around... It mostly changed 
 the shape and depth of the notching - not the frequency.
 
 What knowledge am I missing - I'm an amateur :)
 
 Yes I've seen the 'how to tune db products duplexor' doc - but it talks about 
 dual controls, which apparently I don't have.
 
 Did I buy a piece of junkola?  Teach me obie-wan.
 
 j
 
 

Josh,

The large nut tipped rods in the center of each cavity are the pass 
adjustments. Loosen the locking nut at the bottom of each tuning rod and 
turn the shafts clockwise to set the pass responses where you want. Be 
sure to keep them set high and low as they are labeled. Once the pass is 
where you want it, tighten the clamp nuts back down. Then remove the 
small round covers between the N connectors on each cavity and use a 
small screwdriver or metal tipped tuning tool to _carefully_ put the 
notches where they belong. Put the covers back on and enjoy.

Be sure to put a termination on the side you are not tuning.

Ed Yoho
W6YJ



RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with MASTR EXEC-II, TWO MARC-V; Option/Combo deciphering?

2009-12-08 Thread John Transue
I would be interested in the 2-m cans. What are the make and model?
And where are they located?

John AF4PD

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:Repeater-
buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Philip Barnes-Roberts WA6DZS
Sent: Monday, December 07, 2009 12:42 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Cc: Dr. Hal Frank KF6RRR
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with MASTR EXEC-II, TWO MARC-V;
Option/Combo deciphering?

These 3 radios (with a 2m duplexer and a 6-ft cabinet, some misc.
other
gear, cable and bits) were just donated to KF6RRR for his BSA Venture
Crew; we're trying to figure out what they are, and who might be able
to
use them, and find them a good home, return the Scouts some cash...

After some searching at Repeater-Builder.com, I haven't found the
right
Combo lists yet to decipher them.  PCS3, PC05, PC06, PC13, PC18 no
joy:

1 MASTR EXECUTIVE II (UNLOCKED)
  SERIAL: 0385878 SPL  SHIP DATE 102
  COMBINATION: WVR16HS MOD STATUS * 2 3 * * * *
  FCC XMTR DATA  XT169-A  8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
  FCC RCVR DATA  ER89-A  (UHF Connector on front, extra [rcv?]
coax)
  1 cable to mate with front, to 12-molex (3x4)+ DC+/-, +BNC-RCA thru
pnl.
combo# deciphers to:
W  wall-mount?
V  12VDC?  (still looking for the right list...)
R SPL may mean Special? Oh, joy!
1
6
H
S

2 GE MARC V (Wikipedia: 806-869MHz 'scan-based trunking')

  SERIAL:  0304202  'CLUNK' INSIDE --? (LOCKED)
  COMBINATION: M2YTL5ZOXX   (N Conn on front)
  FCC XMTR DATA  XT-187-A
  FCC RCVR DATA  ER-117-A
combo# deciphers to:
M
2
Y
T
L
5
Z
O
X
X

  SERIAL:  0331391(LOCKED)
  COMBINATION: M2YTL5M0XX   (N Conn on front)
  FCC XMTR DATA  XT-187-A   (1 BENT PIN, JONES' PART OF
CONNECTOR)
  FCC RCVR DATA  ER-117-A
combo# deciphers to:
M
2
Y
T
L
5
M
0
X
X

As I mentioned, there's more; a 2m set of cans, a cabinet, a case of
odd
bits, some used heliax and RG-(8?) and 12-conductor square control
cable, but knowing what these radios above are would help a buyer
figure
out what they want, and get some cash to Hal's crew.
--
'---O=o=O---'
73, Phil Barnes-Roberts WA6DZS  Mailto:pbarnrob at acm dot org 
Microsoft gives you Windows; Linux gives you the whole house.








Yahoo! Groups Links




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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help Identifying UHF Duplexer

2009-10-23 Thread Matthew Kaufman
Motorola T1500-series with the notches, so it is pass-notch as opposed 
to bandpass.

Matthew Kaufman


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help Identifying UHF Duplexer

2009-10-23 Thread Tony KT9AC
Motorola T1504. Just tuned one last weekend and average 81dbm reject 
with probably 0.1uV pass loss. Good for 250W and 406-512. Lots of good 
documentation on the Repeater-Builder page:

http://www.repeater-builder.com/motorola/t1500.html

Good Luck. Bought my last set for around $140.

Tony

bbfmrf wrote:
  

 I have a 4 can duplexer that was removed from service.

 I presently have no use for this item, so I would like to sell it, 
 unfortunately, there are no markings as to its origin. It may be a 
 home brew, but I seem to remember Motorola selling something similar 
 and I believe the model started with a T, but I cannot find any info.

 If anyone can supply me with some info on this duplexer, I would 
 appreciate the help, and also if anyone is interested, I will accept 
 offers.

 Pictures of the duplexer may be found in the Photo Section of this 
 group in my album BBFMRF. They are the first 2 pictures labed AA 
 UHFDuplxerFront and AA UHFDuplxerrear

 FYI The frequency markings on the repeater are correct and the unit 
 should presently be tuned as marked.

 Replies may be posted to the group or sent directly to me at bbfmrf at 
 yahoo.com

 Thanks for all your help.

 


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help Identifying UHF Duplexer

2009-10-23 Thread Ken Arck
At 02:07 PM 10/23/2009, Tony KT9AC wrote:


Motorola T1504. Just tuned one last weekend and average 81dbm reject
with probably 0.1uV pass loss. Good for 250W and 406-512. Lots of good
documentation on the Repeater-Builder page:

Last 2 T1504A's I did exceeded 100 dB isolation (typically 108 
dB). 81 may be spec but the ones I have certainly exceed that!

Ken
--
President and CTO - Arcom Communications
Makers of repeater controllers and accessories.
http://www.arcomcontrollers.com/
Authorized Dealers for Kenwood and Telewave and
we offer complete repeater packages!
AH6LE/R - IRLP Node 3000
http://www.irlp.net
We don't just make 'em. We use 'em!



RE: [Repeater-Builder] help icom f121s

2009-10-20 Thread John Transue

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:Repeater-
buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Carlos Quinones
Sent: Friday, October 09, 2009 8:15 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] help icom f121s

need help i have icom f121s for repeater use i have every thing setup
use cat controller but i turn on the rx exo to on and turn off the
delay
timer off but when i check the horn cable i does not do nothing stays
to
ground no changes of voltage as cor or cos can any one help me
please.


Carlos,
   I am not an expert but I don't see that you have received a reply
to your request, so let me offer a suggestion. I am using F121S's and
F221S's in a repeater application. I believe you have the RX EXO set
correctly. I believe that the horn output will either be ground or
floating. You will need to use a pull up resister or voltage divider
resisters to obtain a COS logic state. 
   Hopefully one of the experts will come onboard and offer a more
authoritive answer to your question. If not, let me know. I can
suggest someone who will help.
   Best good luck to you.
John AF4PD

This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system.
http://www.eset.com




RE: [Repeater-Builder] help icom f121s

2009-10-20 Thread Carlos Quinones
thank you John i will be happy for your help no one neve reply my
request the controller that i am going to use is the Cat controler but
have no luck on it.

Carlos wp4mxb

On Tue, 2009-10-20 at 21:10 -0400, John Transue wrote:
   
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:Repeater-
 buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Carlos Quinones
 Sent: Friday, October 09, 2009 8:15 PM
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] help icom f121s
 
 need help i have icom f121s for repeater use i have every thing setup
 use cat controller but i turn on the rx exo to on and turn off the
 delay
 timer off but when i check the horn cable i does not do nothing stays
 to
 ground no changes of voltage as cor or cos can any one help me
 please.
 
 
 Carlos,
 I am not an expert but I don't see that you have received a reply
 to your request, so let me offer a suggestion. I am using F121S's and
 F221S's in a repeater application. I believe you have the RX EXO set
 correctly. I believe that the horn output will either be ground or
 floating. You will need to use a pull up resister or voltage divider
 resisters to obtain a COS logic state. 
 Hopefully one of the experts will come onboard and offer a more
 authoritive answer to your question. If not, let me know. I can
 suggest someone who will help.
 Best good luck to you.
 John AF4PD
 
 This message was checked by NOD32 antivirus system.
 http://www.eset.com
 
 
 
 
 



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help, please.

2009-10-11 Thread Paul Plack
Eric, right off, I'll challenge the assumption that you need 25 miles 
separation. You'll have too many users who can her the output but not get in, 
and vice versa. A mile or two should be plenty.

Linking via the internet can be done, but making a ham repeater reliant on two 
internet connections is controversial.

Is the transmitter on that Midland capable of 100% duty cycle? Most mobiles are 
not.

73,
Paul, AE4KR

  - Original Message - 
  From: Eric Mynes 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Friday, October 09, 2009 10:43 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help, please.



  Greetings all,

  I joined this group because since earning my license I've wanted to set up...


  . 

  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help, please.

2009-10-11 Thread Chuck Kelsey
Eric -

Have you been to the Repeater Builder website yet? There are lots of articles 
there to assist you in learning more.

25 miles separation for 6 meters is way too much, however, I'm not sure what 
the minimum recommended separation is for a split site. This is somewhat 
dependant on the radios being used and the front end of the receiver.

You will not find too many people familiar with Midland radios - at least for 
repeater use. There are probably better choices. My favorite is the GE Mastr 
II, but a GE Exec II or GE MVP will work. They are easier than some of the 
Motorola's and have a good front end in them. Mobiles are not rated for 100% 
duty cycle like a Mastr II station is. You can easily burn up a mobile if not 
careful.

Duplexer - good luck finding one. They are not easy to locate unless you 
purchase new (and you are not going to like the price). You can build a Heliax 
notch duplexer, but they are not very stable. Been there, done that. I'm 
running a 4-can duplexer on my 6-meter machine.

Expect that you will spend way more money than you'd ever imagine on the 
project. Even homebrewing and scavenging won't be cheap. And it will be 
frustrating at times. You won't believe some of the problems that will crop up 
- but they will.

Users? Don't expect too much there. Build and they will come is NOT typical 
for repeaters. You could have one or two users for years.

Then there's test equipment. You'll need some or someone to help you that does 
have some. You cannot align a receiver without at least a signal generator. An 
analog VOM is best for alignment of the TX and RX. A good wattmeter and dummy 
load will also be needed.

I don't want to sound negative - just pointing out some things to consider.

Hopefully someone else will jump in here and add to my comments.

Chuck
WB2EDV



  - Original Message - 
  From: Eric Mynes 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Saturday, October 10, 2009 12:43 AM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help, please.





  Greetings all,

  I joined this group because since earning my license I've wanted to set up a 
repeater.  I think I'm getting close to that now.  Let me tell you what I have 
and what I think I need.  I ask that all of you smart, experienced repeater 
owners would help me along in my path.  Please keep in mind, this is my first 
attempt at a repeater and really am not sure of all of the detail associated 
with this project.

  I guess I should start with my operating budget on this project.  With a YL, 
a X-XYL, and a child, I'm not able to go out and buy much new stuff, 
commerically manufactured stuff, or specailized equipment.  I'm am able, 
though, to read a schematic and am not afraid of a soldering iron/gun.

  I know that I can't get a 2m frequency so that is out.  It would be the 
easiest since I have a 2m Motorola repeater in my garage that needs to be 
converted to the Ham band.  I have a 440 one too.  Again, it was state surplus 
and needs converted to the Ham bands.  It is also Motorola.  I only took the 
repeaters because the price was right.  Free (hi hi).

  I am interested in 6m, but I'm not set on any frequency yet.  Which is good. 
The only repeaters I can find for 6m in the local area are paper ones.  At 
least, I haven't been able to key a repeater up that the ARRL repeater guide 
says exists with the tones that the guide says are being used.  So, I am 
assuming they are paper repeaters.  

  That said, I have a pair of Midland 70-0351c radios.  They have already been 
converted to the Ham bands and I use them for what little 6m FM work I do.  I 
bought them thinking that I'd like to build the repeater out of them.  They 
seem to be plentiful and cheap.  Two great qualities that I was looking for in 
a radio.

  I have a repeater controller (actually 3 of them).  The one I'm most 
interested in using didn't come out of a Motorola built repeater.  It is 
actually a generic controller that was given to me (well us as I have 2 other 
hams my age that are interested in the project, but I'm the most interested so 
I'm nugging the project along).  The controller was bought originally our 
Elmer, Don Lemley W8DL, to build a 440 repeater out of Motorola mobile units.  
He had purchased everything and then decided that he didn't want to have 
interference in his 440 work so he didn't put the project together.  I might 
want to add that the controller that didn't come with a repeater is a black box 
right now.  I put it in a box in the shack and would have to find it again 
before I could even tell you the make or model of it.  I know it is new and 
hasn't been used.

  Like I said earlier, there are actually 3 of us that have talked/worked on 
this idea over the last 4 years.  I don't have access to the 440 radios or 
antenna that was purchased years ago by our Elmer.

  For an antenna, assuming that I will be on 6m, I was thinking that J-Poles 
would be fine.  I don't expect much use on the repeater other than 

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with a CSI TP 154 Tone Panel

2009-06-28 Thread Richard Fletcher
Hi Dick,

 I have a bunch of these on the air and noted same problem when I used my ICOM 
U 16 a while back. Check that the *123456* turns on the display. Then do the 
*123456# and watch closely that each key press shows up on the display. You 
might have one tone that is not decoded correctly. Try another device and see 
what happens. I Used a GE PCS and a Motorola GP 68 and they worked fine.
 I later tried re-tuning the repeater IF stage later on since I knew that radio 
worked before, and Whala, I had access again on my U16. So seems it might be a 
sensitivity to the tones that is going on there. I have 5 of my Mastr II 
stations on  the TP-154's, 1 is on the TP-163. My other 2 stations that don't 
have the PLL exciters are using the CSI Supper 32 and the old  TP-38. All of 
these things have been stable for many years. My First TP-154 I purchased in 
1993. Its been on the air ever since. 

 Good luck,

 BTW I have a Motorola Motrac Repeater I would love to wire up for the TP-154  
if I could just get the manual on it. I have had it on the air on GMRS on its 
single PL of 103.5 for nearly TEN years. Anyone wired one of these up, I am a 
GE guy and not had much dealing with the Motrac other than when its 10 ton PA 
gave out. (Its seems to run fine on just the exciter)

Regards
 Richard





From: rabre...@sbcglobal.net rabre...@sbcglobal.net
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Saturday, June 27, 2009 9:38:48 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with a CSI TP 154 Tone Panel





Hi Gang

I need some help with a CSI Tone Panel #154.

Most of the programming works from the touch tone telephone 
jack in the back.

What I can not get to work is programming over the air.

I am using the factory pass word *123456# , I can see the digits on the display 
when I punch them in from a talkie.

It never goes into program mode.
It will however put the unit into PL display by pushing *123456*

Any answers for my problem

Thanks 
73
Dick





  

RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Duplexer

2009-06-27 Thread Eric Lemmon
Ron,

If you really have a Q202G (I'm guessing that Q020G was a typo) cavity
set, they are not bandpass.  What suggests that they are bandpass?  The
standard Q202G BpBr duplexer has only one loop per can, and a blank plate is
installed where a second loop would be. A tiny threaded cap next to each
loop connector covers the notch adjustment.  Be aware that a Q202G duplexer
that was in commercial service will probably have the high-split harness
that measures about 12 between the centers of each tee, and will not tune
down to the 2m band.  The harness drawing is found here:
www.repeater-builder.com/sinclair/sinclair-q202-g-cable-harness.pdf

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
 

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of n4sfu
Sent: Saturday, June 27, 2009 7:13 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Duplexer



I dont usually post on the forum but rcv the emails everyday and follow all
posts. I recently purchased a 4 can set of Sinclair Q020G cavities not
knowing until I had them tuned and connected to the MSR2000 that they are
Bandpass only. Needless to say that desense will not permit the rcv of weak
signals at all say 5 miles away. Does anyone know of a good place to acquire
a couple of the notch cavities with the cables to go with this set or of a
good set of BP/BR cavities at a reasonable price to complete this repeater
installation. We are located in South GA and are locating this repeaer on
146.715 mhz. All help is appreciated.
Ron/N4SFU



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Duplexer

2009-06-27 Thread NORM KNAPP
I have a set of sinclair Q202GR and a set of Q202G on 2m and they work great. I 
wouldn't take anything for them. My company sells a lot or Telewave TPRD-1554 
cans, but the sinclairs seem to be much better. My guess is size has a lot to 
do with it. One of the sinclair sets I have has the trimmer caps for the notch. 
The other two sets I have are the kinds with the clear plastic rods you slide 
in and out for the notch. Excellent units!
73 de N5NPO

- Original Message -
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sat Jun 27 21:29:46 2009
Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Duplexer



Ron,

If you really have a Q202G (I'm guessing that Q020G was a typo) cavity
set, they are not bandpass. What suggests that they are bandpass? The
standard Q202G BpBr duplexer has only one loop per can, and a blank plate is
installed where a second loop would be. A tiny threaded cap next to each
loop connector covers the notch adjustment. Be aware that a Q202G duplexer
that was in commercial service will probably have the high-split harness
that measures about 12 between the centers of each tee, and will not tune
down to the 2m band. The harness drawing is found here:
www.repeater-builder.com/sinclair/sinclair-q202-g-cable-harness.pdf

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY


-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com 
[mailto:Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com ] On Behalf Of n4sfu
Sent: Saturday, June 27, 2009 7:13 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com 
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Duplexer

I dont usually post on the forum but rcv the emails everyday and follow all
posts. I recently purchased a 4 can set of Sinclair Q020G cavities not
knowing until I had them tuned and connected to the MSR2000 that they are
Bandpass only. Needless to say that desense will not permit the rcv of weak
signals at all say 5 miles away. Does anyone know of a good place to acquire
a couple of the notch cavities with the cables to go with this set or of a
good set of BP/BR cavities at a reasonable price to complete this repeater
installation. We are located in South GA and are locating this repeaer on
146.715 mhz. All help is appreciated.
Ron/N4SFU






RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help Identifying Matrix in Mastr II

2009-05-25 Thread Eric Lemmon
Laryn,

The combination number EX76KKS66A is your basic E-case VHF mobile radio, and
the part number 19B233115G1 appears to be a box rather than a component.

Please advise the frequencies of the ICOMs, along with their positions in
the radio.  I suspect that you have an IMTS or MTS mobile telephone drawer,
but the frequencies will provide valuable information.

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY


-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Laryn Lohman
Sent: Monday, May 25, 2009 8:05 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help Identifying Matrix in Mastr II



Hi all, I recently acquired an E case Mastr II VHF mobile with two
receivers. Combination EX76KKS66A, KT74-A, ER64-A. It has a number of ICOMS
plugged into each receiver, plus several more in the transmitter. Underneath
an *extra high* (not flat) top cover is a ~4x6 in. box with several dozen
feedthru caps on the side with same number of wires going to a board deep in
the case. The number on the box is 19B233115G1. Inside the box are several
ICs and a pin matrix with wires plugged onto some of them. 

I've searched the RB site for any reference to the above numbers with only
the KT74 showing but no help.

Does anyone have further info on this radio and what the box does? A
scanning receiver(s) maybe? Thanks!

Laryn K8TVZ



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with power supply

2009-05-20 Thread Ralph Mowery



--- On Wed, 5/20/09, Charles Lowery clow...@va.net wrote:

 From: Charles Lowery clow...@va.net
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with power supply
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Wednesday, May 20, 2009, 1:27 PM
 I purchased a Uniden 28 volt power
 supply today on ebay. It lookes like the Astron LSRM-25A or
 35A both front and back (I assume Astron made it). With out
 seeing it I assume it works OK (cost $2.00 + shipping). Has
 anyone converted one of these to 12 volts? I have no
 schematics for it and can not find one on the net. If
 converted what would be the available current?
 
 Charles, NM4V
 
 
It is usually easy to make a 28 volt suply put out 12 volts if it has the 723 
voltage regulator in it.  The problem is unless you can change the transformer 
wiring or whole transformer to put out about half the origional voltage you can 
only draw about 1/4 the origional current and even at that it will not be very 
efficiant.  You want to put about 3 to 5 volts more into the pass transistors 
than the output voltage.  If you just adjust the resistor values the 
transistors will have to dissiapate much more heat.  

Thank of it as you orgionally will have about 32 to 36 volts going to the 
transistors.  That is 4 to 8 volts you have to drop.  At 10 amps this is 40 to 
80 watts.  If you do not lower this voltage and go to 12 volts output then you 
dissipate about 200 to 240 watts.  This will probably be much more than the 
transistor/heatsink combination can dissipate.



  


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing component!

2009-04-05 Thread Chris Carruba
898895482 900 Band, 928-941 MHZ, PRESELECTORS 
 Best Regards,

Chris Carruba 
Co-Admin irc.spidernet.org http://www.spidernet.org
CompuTec Data Systems
Custom Written Software, 
Networking, Forensic Data Recovery






From: Louis k1...@yahoo.com
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, April 5, 2009 10:47:37 AM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing component!


Good morning,

Was recently given some equipment, formally used for paging systems. Much of 
it, I know what it is, and whether I can do anything with it!

But, I have one component, that band range and purpose has not presented itself!

Identification markings:

TX RX Systems
89-88-95482

It was in a box with some 450 mhz equipment!

Any help would be appreciated!

Louis





  

RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing component!

2009-04-05 Thread Eric Lemmon
Louis,

My TX-RX catalog provides the following information:

89 = Preselector
88 = 890-960 MHz
95482 = Not listed, probably a custom product

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
 

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Louis
Sent: Sunday, April 05, 2009 7:48 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID'ing component!

Good morning,

Was recently given some equipment, formerly used for paging systems. Much of
it, I know what it is, and whether I can do anything with it!

But, I have one component, that band range and purpose has not presented
itself!

Identification markings:

TX RX Systems
89-88-95482

It was in a box with some 450 MHz equipment!

Any help would be appreciated!

Louis



Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP Midland 10 meter Z-273 program

2009-03-16 Thread Jon Bivin - WB0VTM
I have a Midland Z-273 programmer, how can I help?

-Jon - WB0VTM

(You can reach me directly at wb0...@earthlink.net )


  - Original Message - 
  From: Carlos Padro 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, March 16, 2009 6:16 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] HELP Midland 10 meter Z-273 program


Please I have a 10 meter band midland Radio, I need who can program the 
Z-273 module. 

Thanks 
Carlos Padro wp4mjp 
787-379-0062 


  

RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with N1274A VHF amplifier please

2009-03-11 Thread Eric Lemmon
Albert,

Yes, you must tune the amplifier for the narrow range of frequencies that
you will be using.  The N1274A amplifier was used with MT500 and MX300
Converta-Com Consoles to boost the output of the Handie-Talkie in mobile
service.  The unit has a sensor to detect the transmit signal and switch the
amplifier into the circuit,  The manual which covers this specific amplifier
is 6881020C90- which, unfortunately, is NLA from Motorola Parts.

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
 

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Albert
Sent: Tuesday, March 10, 2009 11:04 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with N1274A VHF amplifier please

I have very cheaply acquired a Motorola N1274A amplifier and would like to
use it on 2 meters. 

My first question, is, since this amplifier was originally designed for
150-174MHz do I need to do any retuning. I assume the answer would be yes.
On the board, on the far left and the far right I see two components that
appear to be tuning capacitors. They are marked Johanson 9612. (Looking them
up on the net confirmed they were tuning caps) Are these what I need to
adjust? If so, what is the procedure? Tune for max power? Min SWR? Any
assistance would be appreciated. Also, what tool is used for this? I kind of
looks like a tiny hex head, but I haven't looked at it under a magnifier
yet.

Secondly, I was wondering if anyone has a schematic for the amplifier. I
looked on the net but turned up nothing. There is one component inside the
amplifier that appears what used to be a capacitor. It obviously suffered
a catastrophic failure and the magic smoke came out quite rapidly. It is
located on the board next to a large 1 ohm power resistor. I obviously need
to replace this component and could possibly need to replace others. Again,
any schematic or parts list info anyone could share with me would be greatly
appreciated.

Thanks
Albert







Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

2009-02-15 Thread Kevin Custer
wa5luy wrote:
 Bare with me this is a bit long.
 Our repeater is on 146.76TX / 146.16RX. In the next town the repeater 
 having the problem is on 147.36TX / 147.96RX. Both repeaters are 
 Motorola Micors. 

Had the same exact situation with 146.745 and 147.345 years ago.  Both 
MICOR's, not that it matters.  It can happen with any repeater spacing 
that is 600 kiloHertz from one another, and the resulting mix lands on 
the repeater input.

You'll need to install a circulator or isolator on the repeater that is 
causing the mix.  If both repeaters are mixing, then both will need a 
circulator.

This has nothing to do with whether or not the MICOR's were originally 
built for repeater duty or not.  It's a mix that is happening in the 
repeater PA's.

Kevin Custer


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

2009-02-14 Thread mch

You need to reject the opposite TX on each repeater. Your BP filters were set 
wrong. You rejected the RX on the TX side - something the duplexer should be 
doing already. You need to install them in the repeater and reject the other 
TX. IOW, install a filter in the .16 repeater and notch the .36 TX. A good 
duplexer should do this as well, but many don't.

Joe M.

 On Sat 14/02/09  6:34 PM , wa5luy wa5...@cablelynx.com sent:
 Bare with me this is a bit long.
 Our repeater is on 146.76TX / 146.16RX. In the next town the repeater 
 having the problem is on 147.36TX / 147.96RX. Both repeaters are 
 Motorola Micors. Our repeater is a 100 watt PA running about 60watts 
 with a single band pass cavity between TX and a 4 cavity BPBR 
 duplexer connected to 250 feet of 7/8 hard line and a DB224 antenna. 
 The distance between repeaters is about 18 miles line of sight with 
 no obstructions. The other repeater is running a smaller PA driver 
 with an output of 25 watts. I am not sure of the full power 
 capability of this driver. This PA then drives a ¼ KW tube type
 final set at about 90 watts. This is connected to a 4 cavity BPBR duplexer, 
 200 feet of ½ hard line, and a DB224 antenna.
 
 The problem is when the our repeater 146.76 is in transmit and 
 someone keys the 147.36 repeater a loop condition is set up locking 
 on the 147.36 on until the 146.76 drops. Also audio feedback is heard 
 on the 146.36 repeater. This is typical receiver transmitter intermod.
 
 Here is what I have done so for. I checked the 146.76 repeater and 
 there is no signal on it on 147.96 or any other frequency other than 
 146.76. I then drove to the 146.36 repeater location and from my car 
 in front of the repeater building duplicated the problem by 
 transmitting on 146.76. As we used to say in the phone business, the 
 trouble is leaving here OK.  Next I put a calibrated receiver on the 
 TX port of their BPBR duplexer and measured about -50DB when the 
 146.76 repeater was on. Also I could not squelch out the .76 signal 
 by holding my hands over the antenna of my handheld radio in the 
 building. There is lots of.76 signal down there so I suspect 
 transmitter mixing of the 146.76 with 147.36 in the .36 PA. But 
 where? I disconnected the ¼ KW PA and hooked the driver up directly
 to the duplexer and the mixing signal on 147.96 is worse. I then put 
 one band pass 147.36, band reject 147. 76 cavity between the PA 
 driver and the duplexer. To my surprise the mixing signal on 147.96 
 is even higher! I also tried a single band pass cavity with about the 
 same results. Having run out of cavity's I came back home.
 
 I realize their PA driver most likely needs to be checked. If the 
 driver PA is ok they will need 30 to 50 DB of isolation between the 
 147.36 final and the duplexer which will be at least two cavities. I 
 was able to duplicate this mixing with a couple of 2 meter radios, a 
 lossy T connector and a signal generator. I took two high pass 
 cavities out of a duplexer tuning then to pass 147.36 and reject 
 146.76. I ended up with around 70DB of rejection and 2DB in the pass. 
 I recorded the amount of signal needed to cause the mixing. I then 
 put the cavities between the signal generator and transmitter.  To my 
 surprise the amount of signal to start mixing was about the same. The 
 cavities are the type with a T on one port and a compression 
 capacitor for the reject tuning.
 Some questions I have for the group are:
 1. What is the best type of cavity filter to use in this situation 
 and where should it be placed? 
 2. Has anyone else seen that, been there, done that, and what was 
 your solution?
 Any information or ideas will be appreciated.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

2009-02-14 Thread Eric Lemmon
The first question that enters my mind is, were both Micor stations
originally built as repeaters, with the extra filters and shielding plates,
or are one or both base stations that have been converted to repeaters?  It
is important that the extra shield plates provided with repeater stations
are securely in place, with all screws installed.  The second question is,
are either or both repeaters equipped with ferrite isolators?

Thank you for performing some outstanding troubleshooting, and for providing
detailed information about your findings!

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY


-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of wa5luy
Sent: Saturday, February 14, 2009 3:35 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

Bear with me this is a bit long.
Our repeater is on 146.76TX / 146.16RX. In the next town the repeater 
having the problem is on 147.36TX / 147.96RX. Both repeaters are 
Motorola Micors. Our repeater is a 100 watt PA running about 60watts 
with a single band pass cavity between TX and a 4 cavity BPBR 
duplexer connected to 250 feet of 7/8 hard line and a DB224 antenna. 
The distance between repeaters is about 18 miles line of sight with 
no obstructions. The other repeater is running a smaller PA driver 
with an output of 25 watts. I am not sure of the full power 
capability of this driver. This PA then drives a ¼ kW tube type final 
set at about 90 watts. This is connected to a 4 cavity BPBR duplexer, 
200 feet of ½ hard line, and a DB224 antenna.

The problem is when the our repeater 146.76 is in transmit and 
someone keys the 147.36 repeater a loop condition is set up locking 
on the 147.36 on until the 146.76 drops. Also audio feedback is heard 
on the 146.36 repeater. This is typical receiver transmitter intermod.

Here is what I have done so for. I checked the 146.76 repeater and 
there is no signal on it on 147.96 or any other frequency other than 
146.76. I then drove to the 146.36 repeater location and from my car 
in front of the repeater building duplicated the problem by 
transmitting on 146.76. As we used to say in the phone business, the 
trouble is leaving here OK. Next I put a calibrated receiver on the 
TX port of their BPBR duplexer and measured about -50dB when the 
146.76 repeater was on. Also I could not squelch out the .76 signal 
by holding my hands over the antenna of my handheld radio in the 
building. There is lots of .76 signal down there so I suspect 
transmitter mixing of the 146.76 with 147.36 in the .36 PA. But 
where? I disconnected the ¼ kW PA and hooked the driver up directly 
to the duplexer and the mixing signal on 147.96 is worse. I then put 
one band pass 147.36, band reject 147. 76 cavity between the PA 
driver and the duplexer. To my surprise the mixing signal on 147.96 
is even higher! I also tried a single band pass cavity with about the 
same results. Having run out of cavities, I came back home.

I realize their PA driver most likely needs to be checked. If the 
driver PA is ok they will need 30 to 50 dB of isolation between the 
147.36 final and the duplexer which will be at least two cavities. I 
was able to duplicate this mixing with a couple of 2 meter radios, a 
lossy T connector and a signal generator. I took two high pass 
cavities out of a duplexer tuning then to pass 147.36 and reject 
146.76. I ended up with around 70 dB of rejection and 2 dB in the pass. 
I recorded the amount of signal needed to cause the mixing. I then 
put the cavities between the signal generator and transmitter. To my 
surprise the amount of signal to start mixing was about the same. The 
cavities are the type with a T on one port and a compression 
capacitor for the reject tuning.
Some questions I have for the group are:
1. What is the best type of cavity filter to use in this situation 
and where should it be placed? 
2. Has anyone else seen that, been there, done that, and what was 
your solution?
Any information or ideas will be appreciated.







Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

2009-02-14 Thread John Sichert
I hate to tell you, a definite way to eliminate 
the problem, is a frequency change so that the 
output of the two transmitters are no longer not 600 khz apart.
It is possible that the mixing is occurring in 
one of the PA's. If the problem is a mix in the 
TX, an isolator on the offending TX should solve 
it. I like the Sinclair isolators.

2A-B  Most likely a 3rd order intermod product  146.76 X 2 = 293.52

293.52 - 147.36 = 146.16  Bad place for it to end 
up on. I have run into this problem several times.


Telco : I think you meant to say, the trouble 
must be on your end, it is leaving here ok... I 
can't use that excuse, my SXS office does not talk to the outside world yet...

Good Luck
John




At 06:34 PM 2/14/2009, you wrote:
Bare with me this is a bit long.
Our repeater is on 146.76TX / 146.16RX. In the next town the repeater
having the problem is on 147.36TX / 147.96RX. Both repeaters are
Motorola Micors. Our repeater is a 100 watt PA running about 60watts
with a single band pass cavity between TX and a 4 cavity BPBR
duplexer connected to 250 feet of 7/8 hard line and a DB224 antenna.
The distance between repeaters is about 18 miles line of sight with
no obstructions. The other repeater is running a smaller PA driver
with an output of 25 watts. I am not sure of the full power
capability of this driver. This PA then drives a ¼ KW tube type final
set at about 90 watts. This is connected to a 4 cavity BPBR duplexer,
200 feet of ½ hard line, and a DB224 antenna.

The problem is when the our repeater 146.76 is in transmit and
someone keys the 147.36 repeater a loop condition is set up locking
on the 147.36 on until the 146.76 drops. Also audio feedback is heard
on the 146.36 repeater. This is typical receiver transmitter intermod.

Here is what I have done so for. I checked the 146.76 repeater and
there is no signal on it on 147.96 or any other frequency other than
146.76. I then drove to the 146.36 repeater location and from my car
in front of the repeater building duplicated the problem by
transmitting on 146.76. As we used to say in the phone business, the
trouble is leaving here OK.  Next I put a calibrated receiver on the
TX port of their BPBR duplexer and measured about -50DB when the
146.76 repeater was on. Also I could not squelch out the .76 signal
by holding my hands over the antenna of my handheld radio in the
building. There is lots of.76 signal down there so I suspect
transmitter mixing of the 146.76 with 147.36 in the .36 PA. But
where? I disconnected the ¼ KW PA and hooked the driver up directly
to the duplexer and the mixing signal on 147.96 is worse. I then put
one band pass 147.36, band reject 147. 76 cavity between the PA
driver and the duplexer. To my surprise the mixing signal on 147.96
is even higher! I also tried a single band pass cavity with about the
same results. Having run out of cavity's I came back home.

  I realize their PA driver most likely needs to be checked. If the
driver PA is ok they will need 30 to 50 DB of isolation between the
147.36 final and the duplexer which will be at least two cavities. I
was able to duplicate this mixing with a couple of 2 meter radios, a
lossy T connector and a signal generator. I took two high pass
cavities out of a duplexer tuning then to pass 147.36 and reject
146.76. I ended up with around 70DB of rejection and 2DB in the pass.
I recorded the amount of signal needed to cause the mixing. I then
put the cavities between the signal generator and transmitter.  To my
surprise the amount of signal to start mixing was about the same. The
cavities are the type with a T on one port and a compression
capacitor for the reject tuning.
Some questions I have for the group are:
1. What is the best type of cavity filter to use in this situation
and where should it be placed?
2. Has anyone else seen that, been there, done that, and what was
your solution?
Any information or ideas will be appreciated.








Yahoo! Groups Links





RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

2009-02-14 Thread Juan Tellez
We had same problem with 146.940/340 and 146.640/040 few years ago, (
distance between 

repeaters same as yours); tried as many situations as you mentioned, we
ended in using in our repeater 

146.940 two separated antennas, one for RX and other  for TX and the
duplexer, a WP-629 used

 just as filters, this solved the problem 100%.

 

Juan Tellez, XE2SI

 

From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of John Sichert
Sent: Saturday, February 14, 2009 5:13 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

 

I hate to tell you, a definite way to eliminate 
the problem, is a frequency change so that the 
output of the two transmitters are no longer not 600 khz apart.
It is possible that the mixing is occurring in 
one of the PA's. If the problem is a mix in the 
TX, an isolator on the offending TX should solve 
it. I like the Sinclair isolators.

2A-B Most likely a 3rd order intermod product 146.76 X 2 = 293.52

293.52 - 147.36 = 146.16 Bad place for it to end 
up on. I have run into this problem several times.

Telco : I think you meant to say, the trouble 
must be on your end, it is leaving here ok... I 
can't use that excuse, my SXS office does not talk to the outside world
yet...

Good Luck
John

At 06:34 PM 2/14/2009, you wrote:
Bare with me this is a bit long.
Our repeater is on 146.76TX / 146.16RX. In the next town the repeater
having the problem is on 147.36TX / 147.96RX. Both repeaters are
Motorola Micors. Our repeater is a 100 watt PA running about 60watts
with a single band pass cavity between TX and a 4 cavity BPBR
duplexer connected to 250 feet of 7/8 hard line and a DB224 antenna.
The distance between repeaters is about 18 miles line of sight with
no obstructions. The other repeater is running a smaller PA driver
with an output of 25 watts. I am not sure of the full power
capability of this driver. This PA then drives a ¼ KW tube type final
set at about 90 watts. This is connected to a 4 cavity BPBR duplexer,
200 feet of ½ hard line, and a DB224 antenna.

The problem is when the our repeater 146.76 is in transmit and
someone keys the 147.36 repeater a loop condition is set up locking
on the 147.36 on until the 146.76 drops. Also audio feedback is heard
on the 146.36 repeater. This is typical receiver transmitter intermod.

Here is what I have done so for. I checked the 146.76 repeater and
there is no signal on it on 147.96 or any other frequency other than
146.76. I then drove to the 146.36 repeater location and from my car
in front of the repeater building duplicated the problem by
transmitting on 146.76. As we used to say in the phone business, the
trouble is leaving here OK. Next I put a calibrated receiver on the
TX port of their BPBR duplexer and measured about -50DB when the
146.76 repeater was on. Also I could not squelch out the .76 signal
by holding my hands over the antenna of my handheld radio in the
building. There is lots of.76 signal down there so I suspect
transmitter mixing of the 146.76 with 147.36 in the .36 PA. But
where? I disconnected the ¼ KW PA and hooked the driver up directly
to the duplexer and the mixing signal on 147.96 is worse. I then put
one band pass 147.36, band reject 147. 76 cavity between the PA
driver and the duplexer. To my surprise the mixing signal on 147.96
is even higher! I also tried a single band pass cavity with about the
same results. Having run out of cavity's I came back home.

 I realize their PA driver most likely needs to be checked. If the
driver PA is ok they will need 30 to 50 DB of isolation between the
147.36 final and the duplexer which will be at least two cavities. I
was able to duplicate this mixing with a couple of 2 meter radios, a
lossy T connector and a signal generator. I took two high pass
cavities out of a duplexer tuning then to pass 147.36 and reject
146.76. I ended up with around 70DB of rejection and 2DB in the pass.
I recorded the amount of signal needed to cause the mixing. I then
put the cavities between the signal generator and transmitter. To my
surprise the amount of signal to start mixing was about the same. The
cavities are the type with a T on one port and a compression
capacitor for the reject tuning.
Some questions I have for the group are:
1. What is the best type of cavity filter to use in this situation
and where should it be placed?
2. Has anyone else seen that, been there, done that, and what was
your solution?
Any information or ideas will be appreciated.








Yahoo! Groups Links








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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

2009-02-14 Thread Thomas Oliver
There used to be a couple of high power paging transmitters in town 600 KHz
apart in the 152 MHz range that used to raise hell with several ham
repeaters, glad they are gone now.

tom


 [Original Message]
 From: John Snitcher jo...@sxsco.com
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Date: 2/14/2009 8:05:38 PM
 Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

 I hate to tell you, a definite way to eliminate 
 the problem, is a frequency change so that the 
 output of the two transmitters are no longer not 600 khz apart.
 It is possible that the mixing is occurring in 
 one of the PA's. If the problem is a mix in the 
 TX, an isolator on the offending TX should solve 
 it. I like the Sinclair isolators.

 2A-B  Most likely a 3rd order intermod product  146.76 X 2 = 293.52

 293.52 - 147.36 = 146.16  Bad place for it to end 
 up on. I have run into this problem several times.


 Telco : I think you meant to say, the trouble 
 must be on your end, it is leaving here ok... I 
 can't use that excuse, my SXS office does not talk to the outside world
yet...

 Good Luck
 John




 At 06:34 PM 2/14/2009, you wrote:
 Bare with me this is a bit long.
 Our repeater is on 146.76TX / 146.16RX. In the next town the repeater
 having the problem is on 147.36TX / 147.96RX. Both repeaters are
 Motorola Micors. Our repeater is a 100 watt PA running about 60watts
 with a single band pass cavity between TX and a 4 cavity BPBR
 duplexer connected to 250 feet of 7/8 hard line and a DB224 antenna.
 The distance between repeaters is about 18 miles line of sight with
 no obstructions. The other repeater is running a smaller PA driver
 with an output of 25 watts. I am not sure of the full power
 capability of this driver. This PA then drives a ¼ KW tube type final
 set at about 90 watts. This is connected to a 4 cavity BPBR duplexer,
 200 feet of ½ hard line, and a DB224 antenna.
 
 The problem is when the our repeater 146.76 is in transmit and
 someone keys the 147.36 repeater a loop condition is set up locking
 on the 147.36 on until the 146.76 drops. Also audio feedback is heard
 on the 146.36 repeater. This is typical receiver transmitter intermod.
 
 Here is what I have done so for. I checked the 146.76 repeater and
 there is no signal on it on 147.96 or any other frequency other than
 146.76. I then drove to the 146.36 repeater location and from my car
 in front of the repeater building duplicated the problem by
 transmitting on 146.76. As we used to say in the phone business, the
 trouble is leaving here OK.  Next I put a calibrated receiver on the
 TX port of their BPBR duplexer and measured about -50DB when the
 146.76 repeater was on. Also I could not squelch out the .76 signal
 by holding my hands over the antenna of my handheld radio in the
 building. There is lots of.76 signal down there so I suspect
 transmitter mixing of the 146.76 with 147.36 in the .36 PA. But
 where? I disconnected the ¼ KW PA and hooked the driver up directly
 to the duplexer and the mixing signal on 147.96 is worse. I then put
 one band pass 147.36, band reject 147. 76 cavity between the PA
 driver and the duplexer. To my surprise the mixing signal on 147.96
 is even higher! I also tried a single band pass cavity with about the
 same results. Having run out of cavity's I came back home.
 
   I realize their PA driver most likely needs to be checked. If the
 driver PA is ok they will need 30 to 50 DB of isolation between the
 147.36 final and the duplexer which will be at least two cavities. I
 was able to duplicate this mixing with a couple of 2 meter radios, a
 lossy T connector and a signal generator. I took two high pass
 cavities out of a duplexer tuning then to pass 147.36 and reject
 146.76. I ended up with around 70DB of rejection and 2DB in the pass.
 I recorded the amount of signal needed to cause the mixing. I then
 put the cavities between the signal generator and transmitter.  To my
 surprise the amount of signal to start mixing was about the same. The
 cavities are the type with a T on one port and a compression
 capacitor for the reject tuning.
 Some questions I have for the group are:
 1. What is the best type of cavity filter to use in this situation
 and where should it be placed?
 2. Has anyone else seen that, been there, done that, and what was
 your solution?
 Any information or ideas will be appreciated.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Yahoo! Groups Links
 
 
 


 



 Yahoo! Groups Links










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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters.

2009-02-14 Thread pemeott


We have a similar problem in the Twin Cities in Minnesota where we have two AM 
broadcasting 

stations that are 600 Khz apart. One is a 50,000 watt station on 1500 Khz and 
the other is a 

10,000 watt station on 900 Khz.  They are located about 5 miles apart. qs both 
stations are 

on-the-air 24 hours per day the 600 Khz signal is constantly on. 



Ever tried to build a filter for 1500 or 900 Khz to notch them out ?  



We have found (and located) this 600 Khz carrier on the high voltage power 
lines (500,000 V) 

that run close (within 1/2 mile) to the 50,000 watt station.  You can hear the 
600 Khz signal (with 

audio from both stations) from the stations on a AM car radio within 10 miles 
all along the 

power lines.. 



We have had to go to split site 2 meter repeaters within 15 mile radius of 
the two stations. 



Paul   K0LAV  


- Original Message - 
From: Thomas Oliver tsoli...@tir.com 
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Saturday, February 14, 2009 7:34:55 PM GMT -06:00 US/Canada Central 
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters. 

There used to be a couple of high power paging transmitters in town 600 KHz 
apart in the 152 MHz range that used to raise hell with several ham 
repeaters, glad they are gone now. 

tom 


 [Original Message] 
 From: John Snitcher jo...@sxsco.com 
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
 Date: 2/14/2009 8:05:38 PM 
 Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with intermod between repeaters. 
 
 I hate to tell you, a definite way to eliminate 
 the problem, is a frequency change so that the 
 output of the two transmitters are no longer not 600 khz apart. 
 It is possible that the mixing is occurring in 
 one of the PA's. If the problem is a mix in the 
 TX, an isolator on the offending TX should solve 
 it. I like the Sinclair isolators. 
 
 2A-B  Most likely a 3rd order intermod product  146.76 X 2 = 293.52 
 
 293.52 - 147.36 = 146.16  Bad place for it to end 
 up on. I have run into this problem several times. 
 
 
 Telco : I think you meant to say, the trouble 
 must be on your end, it is leaving here ok... I 
 can't use that excuse, my SXS office does not talk to the outside world 
yet... 
 
 Good Luck 
 John 
 
 
 
 
 At 06:34 PM 2/14/2009, you wrote: 
 Bare with me this is a bit long. 
 Our repeater is on 146.76TX / 146.16RX. In the next town the repeater 
 having the problem is on 147.36TX / 147.96RX. Both repeaters are 
 Motorola Micors. Our repeater is a 100 watt PA running about 60watts 
 with a single band pass cavity between TX and a 4 cavity BPBR 
 duplexer connected to 250 feet of 7/8 hard line and a DB224 antenna. 
 The distance between repeaters is about 18 miles line of sight with 
 no obstructions. The other repeater is running a smaller PA driver 
 with an output of 25 watts. I am not sure of the full power 
 capability of this driver. This PA then drives a � KW tube type final 
 set at about 90 watts. This is connected to a 4 cavity BPBR duplexer, 
 200 feet of � hard line, and a DB224 antenna. 
  
 The problem is when the our repeater 146.76 is in transmit and 
 someone keys the 147.36 repeater a loop condition is set up locking 
 on the 147.36 on until the 146.76 drops. Also audio feedback is heard 
 on the 146.36 repeater. This is typical receiver transmitter intermod. 
  
 Here is what I have done so for. I checked the 146.76 repeater and 
 there is no signal on it on 147.96 or any other frequency other than 
 146.76. I then drove to the 146.36 repeater location and from my car 
 in front of the repeater building duplicated the problem by 
 transmitting on 146.76. As we used to say in the phone business, the 
 trouble is leaving here OK.  Next I put a calibrated receiver on the 
 TX port of their BPBR duplexer and measured about -50DB when the 
 146.76 repeater was on. Also I could not squelch out the .76 signal 
 by holding my hands over the antenna of my handheld radio in the 
 building. There is lots of.76 signal down there so I suspect 
 transmitter mixing of the 146.76 with 147.36 in the .36 PA. But 
 where? I disconnected the � KW PA and hooked the driver up directly 
 to the duplexer and the mixing signal on 147.96 is worse. I then put 
 one band pass 147.36, band reject 147. 76 cavity between the PA 
 driver and the duplexer. To my surprise the mixing signal on 147.96 
 is even higher! I also tried a single band pass cavity with about the 
 same results. Having run out of cavity's I came back home. 
  
   I realize their PA driver most likely needs to be checked. If the 
 driver PA is ok they will need 30 to 50 DB of isolation between the 
 147.36 final and the duplexer which will be at least two cavities. I 
 was able to duplicate this mixing with a couple of 2 meter radios, a 
 lossy T connector and a signal generator. I took two high pass 
 cavities out of a duplexer tuning then to pass 147.36 and reject 
 146.76. I ended up with around 70DB of rejection and 2DB in the pass. 
 I

RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola amp

2009-02-05 Thread Eric Lemmon
It's not clear (literally) which component in the pictures is suspect.
However, the N1254A amplifier was never intended, nor is it suitable, for
repeater service.  It was designed as an accessory for the MX300
ConvertaCom, where its duty cycle was very low, and it was fed just 4 to 5
watts.  The fact that it lasted as long as it did is probably luck, and
possibly a testament to its good design.

The instruction manual for the N1254A amplifier is 6881013C30 which,
unfortunately, is NLA from Motorola.  There are a few of these amplifiers
and manuals listed on one of the auction sites.

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
 

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:repeater-buil...@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of The Marlins
Sent: Thursday, February 05, 2009 9:31 AM
To: repeater-builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola amp

Hello group,
The Fessenden Club on Hatteras Island has a Motorola brick mobile type amp
on our Two Meter repeater.
We have had this thing for years.  we feed it about 7 watts and it
faithfully puts out about sixty into our Sinclair duplexer and up to a DB
224 at about 180 ft.  This amp has crashed and one of our fellow club
members is repairing it (AA3ID).But we cant find any information
about it anywhere.
HELP !   
 K4HAT down Cape Hatteras way.
 
Amp is a Motorola N1254A, VHF
Board is the main power amp board, 84E84361B01
Unknown component is either a diode or resistor.
 
Photos attached



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola amp

2009-02-05 Thread Chuck Kelsey
A photo of the entire PA may help someone identify it better. Looks like a 
resistor. If it's one of the resistors I'm thinking of, it might be cheaper to 
replace the entire board because the final transistors may be blown. But, it 
can't be certain without more information. And I'm not that much of a Motorola 
guy.

Chuck
WB2EDV



  - Original Message - 
  From: The Marlins 
  To: repeater-builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Thursday, February 05, 2009 12:30 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola amp


  Hello group,
  The Fessenden Club on Hatteras Island has a Motorola brick mobile type amp 
on our Two Meter repeater.
  We have had this thing for years.  we feed it about 7 watts and it faithfully 
puts out about sixty into our Sinclair duplexer and up to a DB 224 at about 180 
ft.  This amp has crashed and one of our fellow club members is repairing it 
(AA3ID).But we cant find any information about it anywhere.
  HELP !   
   K4HAT down Cape Hatteras way.

  Amp is a Motorola N1254A, VHF
  Board is the main power amp board, 84E84361B01
  Unknown component is either a diode or resistor.

  Photos attached



   



  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP! 2nd try GE Mastr II 900Mhz

2008-09-13 Thread Kris Kirby
On Thu, 11 Sep 2008, Dan wrote:
 I have in my possesion a true 900Mhz Mastr II repeater. I was so 
 surprized to find it I didnt look around for any manuals.
 
 Does ANYONE have information on this rare bird??? It has what looks to 
 be a IDA controller and some kind of secondary board mounted on top of 
 the cabinet. It is all true GE in the gold anodized cabinet, card 
 cage, drawer unit.
 
 Anyone??  help? point me to the info, would love to get this war horse 
 working!

You might try asking AR902:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/AR902Mhz/

--
Kris Kirby, KE4AHR  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
But remember, with no superpowers comes no responsibility. 
--rly


Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP! 2nd try GE Mastr II 900Mhz

2008-09-13 Thread Doug Bade
Dan;
 I can be of some assistance... I am not 
aware of anything actually called a 900 mastr II 
it was called a GE Net 900 station and was a 
business format similar to edacs... There were 
900 mhz stations called Mastr Prism as well...but 
sounds like you have the former.

It requires an external  ref osc connection of 
something like 17.64 mhz... to run the tx and rx. 
The system controller is called a GETC and 
provides for all analog and digital processing at 
4800 baud over the air control data rate. it is a 
1u slide out rack unit directly atop the station.

The station will work fine for 900 ham if you 
take control of the PLL and disable freq control 
from GETC and/or local binary switches attached 
on top of the synthesized exciter inside the 
door. In both instalations I am aware of the GETC 
was completely disconnected, but from what I now 
know, that would not really be necessary 
especially if you wanted to use the digital 
capability of the station it is mixed mode by default

I know of 2 others on the air for ham, I directly 
contributed to the pll control of one and made my 
design from notes from the first.

I have some atmel code for a controller to do the 
freq load and control. I never really wrote it up 
as they are so scarce in the market.

Depending on your level of building, it is quite 
a nice find, and I will be glad to contribute 
what I can. Many of the LBI's are available on 
repeater builder and I have pdf's of those that are missing..

search under Ge Net

feel free to contact me direct for more info..

Doug
KD8B



At 10:43 PM 9/10/2008, you wrote:

I have in my possesion a true 900Mhz Mastr II repeater. I was so
surprized to find it I didnt look around for any manuals.

Does ANYONE have information on this rare bird??? It has what looks to
be a IDA controller and some kind of secondary board mounted on top of
the cabinet. It is all true GE in the gold anodized cabinet, card cage,
drawer unit.

Anyone?? help? point me to the info, would love to get this war horse
working!

Dan/NØFPE





Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP! 2nd try GE Mastr II 900Mhz

2008-09-13 Thread Steve Kometz
Gene on AR902 did some of those, he should be able to help.



Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP! 2nd try GE Mastr II 900Mhz

2008-09-13 Thread Doug Bade
Actually Gene W7UVH did a conversion of 800 Mastr II's to 900...

The 900 station is equivalent to a late Mastr II Edacs station... 
just before MIIe...
They are synthesized already with a synthesizer similar to the 
late 800 GMarc V trunking stationsbut controlled by a GETC shelf, 
probably a turbo GETC..

but yes we are on the AR902mhz list...and I just try not to beat 
folks up with that all the time :-)


Doug
KD8B


At 12:50 PM 9/13/2008, you wrote:

Gene on AR902 did some of those, he should be able to help.





Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help needed on PD-526 UHF duplexer

2008-09-02 Thread Bob M.
Physician, heal thyself!

Did YOU look on www.repeater-builder.com? I know there's a cut chart (PDF file) 
that lists several models, including the 526 using RG214 coax. Probably in the 
Antenna section.

Do you know how good it feels to tell the great one to look in his own back 
yard for a change?!?!?! Sorry, I couldn't resist!

Bob M.
==
--- On Tue, 9/2/08, Mike Morris WA6ILQ [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help needed on PD-526 UHF duplexer
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Tuesday, September 2, 2008, 4:26 PM
 I picked up a PD-526 UHF duplexer as part of a rebuild of a
 local community college repeater (W6BAB).
 
 See these two photos :
 http://www.repeater-builder.com/wa6ilq/pd526-duplexer/duplexer.jpg
 
 http://www.repeater-builder.com/wa6ilq/pd526-duplexer/rg-8.jpg
 
 As visible in the photos this duplexer is missing the
 center section of
 the harness, plus it's so old that it has RG-8 jumpers
 between the
 cavities,and the outer jacket of that RG-8 is cracking.
 
 I'd like to replace the entire harness with modern
 cable but
 need some length measurements of the harness.
 Does anybody have one that they can measure?
 Any suggestions as to cable, or a vendor ?
 
 My current plan is to use RG-393 and new Kings or
 Amphenol N Connectors.
 
 (Why 393? Well, it's going on a 60 watt repeater right
 now,
 and RG142 would be fine, but down the road the duplexer
 will
 probably end up on the output of a 250 w Micor, and if you
 are
 going to make up a harness that will be used for the next
 30
 years why impose limits on yourself ?  Besides RG142
 is LOSSY)
 
 Mike WA6ILQ


  


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help needed on PD-526 UHF duplexer

2008-09-02 Thread DCFluX
This model is now manufactured by EMR in Phoenix, AZ.

http://www.emrcorp.com/brochures/23/RFS%20Brochure_526%20Series.pdf

EMR may be able to make a new harness for you.

Cables should be an electrical 1/4 wave, so it depends on the coax. I
am currently refurbishing one and planning on using RG-142, It has
less loss than RG-223, And 4.5 is about .025dB .

On Tue, Sep 2, 2008 at 3:49 PM, Bob M. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Physician, heal thyself!

 Did YOU look on www.repeater-builder.com? I know there's a cut chart (PDF 
 file) that lists several models, including the 526 using RG214 coax. Probably 
 in the Antenna section.

 Do you know how good it feels to tell the great one to look in his own back 
 yard for a change?!?!?! Sorry, I couldn't resist!

 Bob M.
 ==
 --- On Tue, 9/2/08, Mike Morris WA6ILQ [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help needed on PD-526 UHF duplexer
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Date: Tuesday, September 2, 2008, 4:26 PM
 I picked up a PD-526 UHF duplexer as part of a rebuild of a
 local community college repeater (W6BAB).

 See these two photos :
 http://www.repeater-builder.com/wa6ilq/pd526-duplexer/duplexer.jpg

 http://www.repeater-builder.com/wa6ilq/pd526-duplexer/rg-8.jpg

 As visible in the photos this duplexer is missing the
 center section of
 the harness, plus it's so old that it has RG-8 jumpers
 between the
 cavities,and the outer jacket of that RG-8 is cracking.

 I'd like to replace the entire harness with modern
 cable but
 need some length measurements of the harness.
 Does anybody have one that they can measure?
 Any suggestions as to cable, or a vendor ?

 My current plan is to use RG-393 and new Kings or
 Amphenol N Connectors.

 (Why 393? Well, it's going on a 60 watt repeater right
 now,
 and RG142 would be fine, but down the road the duplexer
 will
 probably end up on the output of a 250 w Micor, and if you
 are
 going to make up a harness that will be used for the next
 30
 years why impose limits on yourself ?  Besides RG142
 is LOSSY)

 Mike WA6ILQ




 



 Yahoo! Groups Links






RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service monitors and a spectrum analyzer

2008-06-26 Thread de W5DK
No, you will only see the peak and skirts of the generated signal, you need to 
terminate all the duplexer ports with 3db 50 ohm pads and tune for pass first, 
lock those down them tune the reject path

 

Bottom of first link is a sketch.

73

Don W5DK

 

http://www.repeater-builder.com/wacom/wp6xx-vhf-tuning-instructions.pdf

 

http://www.repeater-builder.com/antenna/ant-sys-index.html#duplexers

 

 

From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
Joel
Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2008 10:54 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service monitors 
and a spectrum analyzer

 

Can someone in the group give me a sketch diagram of the setup, for tuning a 
duplexer with the following equipment I have?.

I have two (2) service monitors (Marconi 2955/A), and a spectrum analyzer 
(Avcom PSA-65A, no built-in tracking generator)

Q...Will I be able to see the response graph of the duplexer, as when I use 
a spectrum analyzer with a built-in tracking generator?

All comments will be appreciated, and set aside for the radio club here 
archive.

v44kai.Joel. 

 



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service monitors and a spectrum analyzer

2008-06-26 Thread Joel
Got you Don, thanks for responding.

But I'm looking for something more specific as to, how one may hook up, the 
aforementioned equipment to do what the spectrum analyzer/with the TG does to 
obtain a set of duplexer tuned to a specific frequency. 

v44kai.Joel.


  - Original Message - 
  From: de W5DK 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2008 11:40 AM
  Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service 
monitors and a spectrum analyzer


  No, you will only see the peak and skirts of the generated signal, you need 
to terminate all the duplexer ports with 3db 50 ohm pads and tune for pass 
first, lock those down them tune the reject path

   

  Bottom of first link is a sketch.

  73

  Don W5DK

   

  http://www.repeater-builder.com/wacom/wp6xx-vhf-tuning-instructions.pdf

   

  http://www.repeater-builder.com/antenna/ant-sys-index.html#duplexers

   

   

  From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
Joel
  Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2008 10:54 AM
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service monitors 
and a spectrum analyzer

   

  Can someone in the group give me a sketch diagram of the setup, for tuning a 
  duplexer with the following equipment I have?.

  I have two (2) service monitors (Marconi 2955/A), and a spectrum analyzer 
  (Avcom PSA-65A, no built-in tracking generator)

  Q...Will I be able to see the response graph of the duplexer, as when I use 
  a spectrum analyzer with a built-in tracking generator?

  All comments will be appreciated, and set aside for the radio club here 
  archive.

  v44kai.Joel. 


   


--



  No virus found in this incoming message.
  Checked by AVG. 
  Version: 8.0.101 / Virus Database: 270.4.1/1519 - Release Date: 6/25/2008 
4:13 PM


RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service monitors and a spectrum analyzer

2008-06-26 Thread de W5DK
Joel, it will be almost the same, but instead of seeing the “waves” of the 
peak/pass and dip/notch., you will only see the vertical “spike” of the 
generated signal. Just like if you hooked the generator directly to the S/A. 
you will only be able to adjust for max pass of the desired freq (tallest 
spike)and min pass (shortest spike)of the reject/notch freq.

 

Hook the s/a to the antenna port, a dummy to one side of the duplexer while 
generating into the side you are adjusting. Then switch sides. I used to have 
to do exactly this till I got a tracking gen s/a. --then I re-visited some of 
my work and it couldn’t be improved. Made me wonder why I spent the extra money 
on the new service monitor. hi

73

Don

W5DK

 

From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
Joel
Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2008 1:14 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service 
monitors and a spectrum analyzer

 

 

Got you Don, thanks for responding.

 

But I'm looking for something more specific as to, how one may hook up, the 
aforementioned equipment to do what the spectrum analyzer/with the TG does to 
obtain a set of duplexer tuned to a specific frequency. 

 

v44kai.Joel.

 

 

- Original Message - 

From: de W5DK mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]  

To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 

Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2008 11:40 AM

Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service 
monitors and a spectrum analyzer

 

No, you will only see the peak and skirts of the generated signal, you need to 
terminate all the duplexer ports with 3db 50 ohm pads and tune for pass first, 
lock those down them tune the reject path

 

Bottom of first link is a sketch.

73

Don W5DK

 

http://www.repeater-builder.com/wacom/wp6xx-vhf-tuning-instructions.pdf

 

http://www.repeater-builder.com/antenna/ant-sys-index.html#duplexers

 

 

From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of 
Joel
Sent: Thursday, June 26, 2008 10:54 AM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help! Duplexer setup = with two service monitors 
and a spectrum analyzer

 

Can someone in the group give me a sketch diagram of the setup, for tuning a 
duplexer with the following equipment I have?.

I have two (2) service monitors (Marconi 2955/A), and a spectrum analyzer 
(Avcom PSA-65A, no built-in tracking generator)

Q...Will I be able to see the response graph of the duplexer, as when I use 
a spectrum analyzer with a built-in tracking generator?

All comments will be appreciated, and set aside for the radio club here 
archive.

v44kai.Joel. 

  _  


No virus found in this incoming message.
Checked by AVG. 
Version: 8.0.101 / Virus Database: 270.4.1/1519 - Release Date: 6/25/2008 4:13 
PM

 



RE: [Repeater-Builder] HELP!!!!

2008-06-20 Thread Robert Pease
Set the tail time to 0. They are seeing each others tails. You could set the 
repeaters connecting to port 1 and 2 to PL on COR then set the half duplex 
link radios to pl decode.

Rob. KS4EC

Sent by Good Messaging (www.good.com)


 -Original Message-
From:   tgundo2003 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent:   Friday, June 20, 2008 05:16 PM Eastern Standard Time
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject:[Repeater-Builder] HELP

In an effort to expand radio coverage for an event coming up- we have
done the following:

System is a 7330

port 1- Local Micor repeater

port 2- Link radio half duplex to another repeater

port 3- link radio half duplex to another repeater


System is normally port 1  2 and it works great.

Port 3 is the new addition.

No matter what I do- kerchunk delay, anything I try I cannot get 23
to stop bouncing between them. Both systems on 23 are running real
minimal, no ID's, no curt beeps, 1 sec hangtime.

I would write a macro to turn off rx3 for 4 sec after rx1 or 2 unkeys,
but I wold need the Pause feature of a macro which does not exist yet
according to the manual.

I'm out of ideas- anyone have any?

Thanks!!

Tom W9SRV  Brian WD9HSY


Since 1974, the award-winning Alpert JFCS has helped families of all faiths 
throughout most of Palm Beach County, FL, via counseling, seniors services, 
residences for the disabled, mentoring children, support groups and a lot more.

SOLUTIONS FOR LIVING 
www.JFCSonline.com 

Please take note of our new website and E-Mail Addresses. Please update your 
contacts ASAP.
 
 
 
 

 
 
NOTICE:
 
This e-mail message and all attachments transmitted with it are intended solely 
for the use of the addressee and may contain legally privileged and 
confidential information. If the reader of this message is not the intended 
recipient, or an employee or agent responsible for delivering this message to 
the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, 
distribution, copying, or other use of this message or its attachments is 
strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please notify 
the sender immediately by replying to this message and please delete it from 
your computer.





RE: [Repeater-Builder] HELP!!!!

2008-06-20 Thread TGundo 2003
Thanks-

Found one more tail i missed on one machine- all good now!!!

Tom
W9SRV

--- On Fri, 6/20/08, Robert Pease [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Robert Pease [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: [Repeater-Builder] HELP
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Date: Friday, June 20, 2008, 4:24 PM

RE: [Repeater-Builder] HELP







Set the tail time to 0. They are seeing each others tails. You could set the 
repeaters connecting to port 1 and 2 to PL on COR then set the half duplex 
link radios to pl decode.



Rob. KS4EC



Sent by Good Messaging (www.good.com)





 -Original Message-

From:   tgundo2003 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Sent:   Friday, June 20, 2008 05:16 PM Eastern Standard Time

To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com

Subject:    [Repeater-Builder] HELP



In an effort to expand radio coverage for an event coming up- we have

done the following:



System is a 7330



port 1- Local Micor repeater



port 2- Link radio half duplex to another repeater



port 3- link radio half duplex to another repeater





System is normally port 1  2 and it works great.



Port 3 is the new addition.



No matter what I do- kerchunk delay, anything I try I cannot get 23

to stop bouncing between them. Both systems on 23 are running real

minimal, no ID's, no curt beeps, 1 sec hangtime.



I would write a macro to turn off rx3 for 4 sec after rx1 or 2 unkeys,

but I wold need the Pause feature of a macro which does not exist yet

according to the manual.



I'm out of ideas- anyone have any?



Thanks!!



Tom W9SRV  Brian WD9HSY








 
Since 1974, the award-winning Alpert JFCS has helped families of all faiths 
throughout most of Palm Beach County , FL , via counseling, seniors services, 
residences for the disabled, mentoring children, support groups and a lot more. 
SOLUTIONS FOR LIVING (R)
www.JFCSonline.com
 
Please take note of our new website and E-Mail Addresses.
Please update your contacts ASAP.
 

 
  
NOTICE: 
  
This e-mail message and all attachments transmitted with it are intended solely 
for the use of the addressee and may contain legally privileged and 
confidential information. If the reader of this message is not the intended 
recipient, or an employee or agent responsible for delivering this message to 
the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that any dissemination, 
distribution, copying, or other use of this message or its attachments is 
strictly prohibited. If you have received this message in error, please notify 
the sender immediately by replying to this message and please delete it from 
your computer. 
 


  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with HP 8924C

2008-04-11 Thread [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Hi Paul

the only way i found to dec. and enc. pl/ctcss is from tx and rx side.
  u need to go on tx and make af gen 1
to 300Hz to filter the ctcss and tx from radio don't make noise
all athers to 1khz or 1.5khz
from the rx side just insert pl/ctcss in af gen 1 and send signal from
amplitude and send 1 khz for tone
finaly go shift save and save the settings

73's John 9H5IC





On 10/4/2008, Paul Holm [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hello,

I've been working with my 8924C trying to learn each of the functions.  I've 
been following the manual for an 8920B in order to focus on the analog 
functions vs. CDMA.  I'm hoping other users out there could offer advice.

I'm not picking up on how the unit deals with PL/CTCSS tones in encode or 
decode.  The goal is to be able to see what tones are being put out by a TX 
and/or being sensed by a RX.  The nearest thing I see in the menus is Func 
Gen.  All others are CDCSS, Digi Page, Tone Seq, DTMF, LTR, EDACS, etc.  

Am I on the right track for PL by looking in Func Gen?  Or should I be in a 
different Signal Decoder Mode?

And then, when I've got this part straight, what should I be able to see 
displayed(tone freq? tone mod level?) when I monitor off-air signals?

Thanks.

73  Paul - KC0HST



RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Sinclair Q-202G

2008-02-25 Thread Mike Morris WA6ILQ
At 09:32 PM 02/24/08, you wrote:
Collin,

Simply replace your existing harness that has 12 center-to-center lengths
with an identical harness that has 14 center-to-center lengths.  The two
end pieces, the ones that connect to the receiver and transmitter, can be
any length that fits.  Please use RG-214/U double-shielded cable, in lieu of
single-shielded RG-213/U cable.  You won't regret it!

Since you mention eight pieces of coax, I wonder if perhaps you have the
earlier version of the Q-202G duplexer.  All of the Q-202G duplexers that I
have converted had four cavities, and the cable harness comprised five tee
connectors and two male N plugs for a total of six pieces of cable.

Don't get wrapped up with wavelengths, because Sinclair wasn't that
concerned about it; the high-split (150-174 MHz) harness had 12 spacing,
and the low-split (138-150 MHz) harness had 14 spacing.

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY

And a fast test is to add a right angle adapter to each end of the existing
cable pieces.  The average right angle adapter adds about an inch, so
adding one to each end will lengthen the cable to 14 inches, plus or minus...

Now, I wouldn't use adapters for a long term solution, but it works 
for testing.

Mike WA6ILQ



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Sinclair Q-202G

2008-02-25 Thread Jim Brown
Collin, it depends on what vintage Q-202G you have.  I have four duplexers that 
have the rexolite rod caps to adjust the notch frequency on each cavity, and I 
brought them down into the ham band by increasing the length of the jumper 
cable that connects directly to the cavity from 10.5 inches to 12.5 inches.

I also came up with a manual and Eric Lemmon scanned it into a PDF file and 
posted the manual on the repeater-builder site.

http://www.repeater-builder.com/sinclair/q202-208-218-tuning.pdf

The manual explains how to tune the duplexer to a new frequency.  What you have 
to keep in mind is that the first piece of cable connecting to each cavity is 
part of the notch circuit and that piece of cable in conjunction with the 
variable setting of the dialectric rod determines the frequency of the notch.  
Also keep in mind that this circuit produces a notch above and below the center 
frequency the cavity is tuned to, and the high and low sides of the duplexer 
have identical circuitry.

73 - Jim  W5ZIT

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:   Dear Friends,
 I am working on retuning a Sinclair Q-202G duplexer to 144.810/145.410. 
 The question I have is about the new cables I will need. First will I 
 need all new cables? What I mean is there are actually eight pieces in 
 all. These need to be 1/4 wave each? Also when measuring these I know 
 the measurement is from the center of the T connector. When measuring 
 to a connection on a stub where is the measurement taken from? I have 
 some RG-213 cables which measure 12 from T center to T center. 
 Anyone that can help would be greatly appreciated.
 Thanks, Collin






   
-
Never miss a thing.   Make Yahoo your homepage.

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Sinclair Q-202G

2008-02-24 Thread Ken Arck
At 04:38 PM 2/24/2008, you wrote:

Dear Friends,
I am working on retuning a Sinclair Q-202G duplexer to 144.810/145.410.
The question I have is about the new cables I will need. First will I
need all new cables?

---It depends on where the duplexer was originally. I run a Q-202G 
(six cavity) and didn't need to replace a thing when it was retuned 
down from the 150 region

Ken

--
President and CTO - Arcom Communications
Makers of repeater controllers and accessories.
http://www.arcomcontrollers.com/
Authorized Dealers for Kenwood and Telewave and
we offer complete repeater packages!
AH6LE/R - IRLP Node 3000
http://www.irlp.net
We don't just make 'em. We use 'em!



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Sinclair Q-202G

2008-02-24 Thread Mike Morris WA6ILQ
The cavities will probably go, the harness may not.  What is the frequency
on the label ?  Unless someone has replaced the harness that is a good
indicator as to which one you have (there were two).

Mike WA6ILQ

At 04:38 PM 02/24/08, you wrote:
Dear Friends,
I am working on retuning a Sinclair Q-202G duplexer to 144.810/145.410.
The question I have is about the new cables I will need. First will I
need all new cables? What I mean is there are actually eight pieces in
all. These need to be 1/4 wave each? Also when measuring these I know
the measurement is from the center of the T connector. When measuring
to a connection on a stub where is the measurement taken from? I have
some RG-213 cables which measure 12 from T center to T center.
Anyone that can help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks, Collin

More new features than ever.  Check out the new AOL Mail ! -
http://webmail.aol.com





Yahoo! Groups Links






RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Sinclair Q-202G

2008-02-24 Thread Eric Lemmon
Collin,

Simply replace your existing harness that has 12 center-to-center lengths
with an identical harness that has 14 center-to-center lengths.  The two
end pieces, the ones that connect to the receiver and transmitter, can be
any length that fits.  Please use RG-214/U double-shielded cable, in lieu of
single-shielded RG-213/U cable.  You won't regret it!

Since you mention eight pieces of coax, I wonder if perhaps you have the
earlier version of the Q-202G duplexer.  All of the Q-202G duplexers that I
have converted had four cavities, and the cable harness comprised five tee
connectors and two male N plugs for a total of six pieces of cable.

Don't get wrapped up with wavelengths, because Sinclair wasn't that
concerned about it; the high-split (150-174 MHz) harness had 12 spacing,
and the low-split (138-150 MHz) harness had 14 spacing.

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
 

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Sunday, February 24, 2008 4:39 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Sinclair Q-202G

Dear Friends,
I am working on retuning a Sinclair Q-202G duplexer to 144.810/145.410. 
The question I have is about the new cables I will need. First will I 
need all new cables? What I mean is there are actually eight pieces in 
all. These need to be 1/4 wave each? Also when measuring these I know 
the measurement is from the center of the T connector. When measuring 
to a connection on a stub where is the measurement taken from? I have 
some RG-213 cables which measure 12 from T center to T center. 
Anyone that can help would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks, Collin



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help: need to ID part on PSC-1422 Pwr. Sup.

2007-12-08 Thread rb_n3dab
Disregard the earlier request message.  The part is a diode and a 3A 400PIV Rat 
Shack replacement fixed the problem .
--
Doug   
N3DAB/WPRX486/WPJL709

 n3dab [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: 

=
Can anyone ID CR101 on the regulator board of a Wilson PSC-1422 Power 
Supply.  What ever it was, it is completly burnt up, and I don't have a 
manual or schematic to look it up.

Thanks
Doug N3DAB




Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP NEEDED - Programming Motorola GR-1225 repeater accessory port

2007-12-07 Thread Radio Guy
I had similair problems when I tried to interface mine to a NHRC controller.
My solution was to call the local Motorola dealer where I bought it
from and tell him the two controlers would not play together. ( The
repeater has a built in controller ).
His solution was to shut off the repeat function, using software.
Problem solved.
Sorry, I can't help more, and I don't know what commands he used.
Now I have a separate transmitter and receiver, at least as far as the
controller is concerned.


On Dec 6, 2007 4:12 PM, ve7ltd [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:




 I am trying to help an IRLP owner interface his GR-1225 repeater to
 an IRLP system. Mind you I am 1000 miles away, and can only help over
 the phone.

 The problem occurs when he tries to operate full duplex. The repeater
 works fine on its own, and works fine when the node is operating in
 half duplex.

 But as soon as the External PTT is asserted on Pin 3 of the accessory
 jack, the RX Audio from Pin 11 is being muted. I have been looking
 through the help file for the WinRSS that runs the 1225 series, but
 for the life of me I can not figure out why a full duplex repeater
 would do this.

 The audio from pin 11 needs to be squelch muted, but why is it also
 being muted when the external PTT is applied?

 Can anyone come up with a solution? How would you ever be able to
 configure this repeater to use an external controller?

 Dave Cameron - VE7LTD
 IRLP System Designer

 ---
Ken


Re: [Repeater-Builder] help with repeater

2007-12-05 Thread rande1
It would be very helpful to know where my area is

Randy
WB0VHB



 I am looking for some one in my area to help build a Vhf repeater. The
 help would need to be hands-on.Any one that can help please let me
 know.






Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000

2007-11-13 Thread Jim Miller WB5OXQ in Waco
I checked and found these cables intact.  I wonder what voltages should be at 
the 5 pin plug under the control pc board.  I have 14vdc on the red and black 
but nothing on any of the other wires.  all fuses on the ps are good.  Still 
dead in the water.

  - Original Message - 
  From: Andrew G. 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Monday, November 12, 2007 9:33 AM
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000


   
   

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000

2007-11-13 Thread Jay Urish
Do you have a diagnostic panel?

Also, there is a cable with a molex connector on it that goes to the PS..
Is that firmly pluged in?


Jim Miller WB5OXQ in Waco wrote:
 
 
 I checked and found these cables intact.  I wonder what voltages should 
 be at the 5 pin plug under the control pc board.  I have 14vdc on the 
 red and black but nothing on any of the other wires.  all fuses on the 
 ps are good.  Still dead in the water.
  
 
 - Original Message -
 *From:* Andrew G. mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 *To:* Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 mailto:Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 *Sent:* Monday, November 12, 2007 9:33 AM
 *Subject:* Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000
 
 
 

-- 
Jay Urish W5GM  ex. KB5VPS

ARRL Life MemberDenton County ARRL VEC
N5ERS VP/Trustee

Monitoring 444.850 PL-88.5 146.92 PL-110.9



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000

2007-11-13 Thread Mike Morris WA6ILQ
At 09:05 PM 11/11/07, you wrote:
I bought a msf 5000 cxb vhf station for my club to build a repeater.
this unit was rack mounted along with several public safety repeaters
so I did not get it in the original cabinet.  I was shipped the power
supply, the pa and the rf deck with controller.  Before shipping the
seller removed a secure board because hams do not usually need them and
we dont.  I reasembled the unit in a 4' GE cabinet and connected all
the cables that were sent to me as best as i could figure out without
any instructions.  When i plug the station in the 12 vdc cooling fans
come on but the control deck is dead.  I found 1 cable that came from
the power supply and plugged it into a jack on the rear of the rf deck
and another cable that went to the pa from the rf deck. I also found
and connected the rf cables as needed. There are still some left over
connecter pins on the pc board at the rear of the rf deck that I do not
know what is supposed to be connected to.  Inside the control deck I
see what looks like a 5 pin connector coming from  the rf deck and it
does contain 13.2 vdc on the red and black wires.  Something must be
missing causing the controler not to light up at all.  Cam anyone
supply me a interconnect diagram so I can see if i have a missing cable.
WB5OXQ.

Look here:
http://www.repeater-builder.com/motorola/msf/msf-secure-board-removal.html

Mike




Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000

2007-11-13 Thread Jim Miller WB5OXQ in Waco
I do not have the test device for this model.  the connecter from the power 
supply to the rf deck is intact at both ends.
I believe this unit was working when removed from service but after the seller 
removed the secure audio board I suspect some jumper or cable of some kind much 
have been left out accidentally.  I cant imagine what though.  I hate to take 
it to the Motorola shop at 95.00 per hour.  I am real sad that this wont work 
because I thought it would make a real good 2 meter repeater for our club.  the 
seller says he is sorry but things happen and that is why he sold it as is.  I 
just wish there was a ham who would help within a reasonable driving distance 
of Waco, TX and I would take the unit to him for help.  


  - Original Message - 
  From: Jay Urish 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2007 11:48 AM
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000


  Do you have a diagnostic panel?



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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000

2007-11-12 Thread Andrew G.
Jim,
   Here are two pictures for some reference:
 http://repeater-builder.com/motorola/msf/tour/pics/under_rf_tray.jpg
 
 http://repeater-builder.com/motorola/msf/tour/pics/under_control_tray.jpg

Also, when you flip open the control tray, make sure the blue ribbon cable is 
plugged in and secure as well as the smaller 5pin power connector that I think 
you may have seen all ready at J701. From there, you might want to look at all 
the fuses on the board. 

Andy KC2GOW

- Original Message 
From: Jim Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, November 12, 2007 12:05:13 AM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with dead msf 5000

I bought a msf 5000 cxb vhf station for my club to build a repeater. 
this unit was rack mounted along with several public safety repeaters 
so I did not get it in the original cabinet. I was shipped the power 
supply, the pa and the rf deck with controller. Before shipping the 
seller removed a secure board because hams do not usually need them and 
we dont. I reasembled the unit in a 4' GE cabinet and connected all 
the cables that were sent to me as best as i could figure out without 
any instructions. When i plug the station in the 12 vdc cooling fans 
come on but the control deck is dead. I found 1 cable that came from 
the power supply and plugged it into a jack on the rear of the rf deck 
and another cable that went to the pa from the rf deck. I also found 
and connected the rf cables as needed. There are still some left over 
connecter pins on the pc board at the rear of the rf deck that I do not 
know what is supposed to be connected to. Inside the control deck I 
see what looks like a 5 pin connector coming from the rf deck and it 
does contain 13.2 vdc on the red and black wires. Something must be 
missing causing the controler not to light up at all. Cam anyone 
supply me a interconnect diagram so I can see if i have a missing cable.
WB5OXQ.




__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam?  Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola Radius M120 - Intermittent Recieve

2007-10-03 Thread Scott Zimmerman
Russ,

If the receive is intermittent, your problem is likely NOT the LO being 
off-frequency. An LO that was off would rear its head as sounding off 
frequency or poor sensitivity. I have had some problems with the LO crystals 
drifting as of late, but I don't think that is your problem from the 
description you provided. At any rate, the second LO crystal frequency is 
44.645 NOT 45.645. The IF frequency is 45.10, so 45.100 - 44.645 = 455KHz.

It sounds to me like you might have a broken/cracked solder joint somewhere 
inside the radio or that the Rx VCO is going out of lock.

Does it seem to be temperature related? If so, that would lead more toward 
the VCO. You can open the radio and VCO compartment and see what the voltage 
is on the test point marked SL. It should be around 7v or so. If not, you 
can adjust the Rx VCO coil to get it more in-line where it needs to be.

Good luck,
Scott

Scott Zimmerman
Amateur Radio Call N3XCC
612 Barnett Rd
Boswell, PA 15531

- Original Message - 
From: russcrisp [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, October 03, 2007 1:44 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola Radius M120 - Intermittent 
Recieve


I have a Moto M120 UHF that has intermittent receive. Doesn't work more
 than it does..  A friend suggested that I count the Second LO, and make
 sure it's at 45.645 Mhz. I have no service documentation on this model,
 so rather than poke all around looking for something that may not be
 there, I thought I ask the group here for assistance.

 Does anyone have experience with the M120?  Is this indeed the correct
 setting for the second LO for a UHF radio? 438-470.. Where is the
 proper place to attach a counter to measure this?

 Any help would be greatly appreciated. This radio is used in a link.

 Best regards,
 Russ Crisp
 K4RCC






 Yahoo! Groups Links





 -- 
 No virus found in this incoming message.
 Checked by AVG Free Edition.
 Version: 7.5.488 / Virus Database: 269.14.0/1046 - Release Date: 10/3/2007 
 10:08 AM

 



RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola Radius M120 - Intermittent Recieve

2007-10-03 Thread Russ Crisp
Hey Scott.

 

Thanks for writing back.  You did some work for me not too long ago. I
sent up a spectra-tac receiver that you retuned for me while Kevin was
busy somewhere. We swapped the vibrasponder tone element too. I needed
131.8, and you took what was in it and put that one back in.. Remember?

 

Anyhoo... I got this unit about a year ago, and it looked brand new..
Not a scratch on it. Still had that new smell too. I employed it as a
IRLP link radio. It's a 10w unit. I'd often try to operate the IRLP node
and it would not respond. Turned out to be this unit's receiver.

 

I opened it up last nite. Looked totally virgin inside. I cleaned the
connectors where the boards(top and bottom) attach to the chassis.  I
had to take the lid off what I'm assuming is the VCO compartment to get
at a couple of screws to lift the board. It's the shiny lid that presses
down over a couple of sections inside the radio, correct?

 

I'll open it up again this evening and take a measurement at the test
point you indicated.   I'll assume I don't need a signal present to make
this measurement. Might be good if you could give me a pointer to
location of the RX VCO coil too, so I can tweak if it's out of spec..
Is it labeled?   What voltage would be considered acceptable?  7 +- 2v
or so???

 

It really doesn't seem temperature related. The unit operates in a
climate controlled room.  I may send it up to you for a look if I can't
make any headway, if you work on these...

 

73s, and thanks again for writing back.

Russ

 

From: Scott Zimmerman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, October 03, 2007 2:26 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola Radius M120 -
Intermittent Recieve

 

Russ,

If the receive is intermittent, your problem is likely NOT the LO being 
off-frequency. An LO that was off would rear its head as sounding off 
frequency or poor sensitivity. I have had some problems with the LO
crystals 
drifting as of late, but I don't think that is your problem from the 
description you provided. At any rate, the second LO crystal frequency
is 
44.645 NOT 45.645. The IF frequency is 45.10, so 45.100 - 44.645 =
455KHz.

It sounds to me like you might have a broken/cracked solder joint
somewhere 
inside the radio or that the Rx VCO is going out of lock.

Does it seem to be temperature related? If so, that would lead more
toward 
the VCO. You can open the radio and VCO compartment and see what the
voltage 
is on the test point marked SL. It should be around 7v or so. If not,
you 
can adjust the Rx VCO coil to get it more in-line where it needs to be.

Good luck,
Scott

Scott Zimmerman
Amateur Radio Call N3XCC
612 Barnett Rd
Boswell, PA 15531

- Original Message - 
From: russcrisp [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailto:rcrisp%40gmail.com 
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
mailto:Repeater-Builder%40yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Wednesday, October 03, 2007 1:44 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help with Motorola Radius M120 -
Intermittent 
Recieve

I have a Moto M120 UHF that has intermittent receive. Doesn't work more
 than it does.. A friend suggested that I count the Second LO, and make
 sure it's at 45.645 Mhz. I have no service documentation on this
model,
 so rather than poke all around looking for something that may not be
 there, I thought I ask the group here for assistance.

 Does anyone have experience with the M120? Is this indeed the correct
 setting for the second LO for a UHF radio? 438-470.. Where is the
 proper place to attach a counter to measure this?

 Any help would be greatly appreciated. This radio is used in a link.

 Best regards,
 Russ Crisp
 K4RCC






 Yahoo! Groups Links





 -- 
 No virus found in this incoming message.
 Checked by AVG Free Edition.
 Version: 7.5.488 / Virus Database: 269.14.0/1046 - Release Date:
10/3/2007 
 10:08 AM

 

 



Re: [Repeater-Builder] HElp

2007-08-14 Thread DCFluX
Not yet, but soon there will be.

Do you know if you got the version with the integrated Master Base
Station Oscillator? It will have 5 BNC jacks on the rear if you do.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/files/FluX%20Research/SEA%20ESP1000%28M%29%2C%20ESP1100%28M%29%2C%20ESP-504/

http://www.cornerstonesmr.com/pdf/ESP1000Instructions.pdf

On 8/13/07, kb3nun [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I just got a SEA ESP1000 repeater looking for all information and is
 there any firmware updates that I can get.

 Thanks
 KB3NUN






 Yahoo! Groups Links






RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help finding LBI's for a Delta

2007-07-31 Thread Eric Lemmon
Gale,

I looked up N3A016 in my GE microfiche file, and I believe that it is a
Package Number which was often used in place of a combination number when
it was a standard model.  However, the package number listing begins at
N3A101 which raises the possibility that the number may not be correct.
Package numbers in that general range are mostly Delta mobile radios, not
stations.  Please double-check the number, and also pass along other numbers
and markings on the station.

73, Eric Lemmon WB6FLY
 

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, July 31, 2007 12:55 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help finding LBI's for a Delta

I have a Delta table top base (low band) that I am trying to find out 
which lbis apply to it. So far I know that the id plate says that it 
is a N3A016. I will dig into it more shortly to try and id the main 
modules in the radio itself shortly.

Gale




Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help identifying GE uhf receiver

2007-06-16 Thread Steve S. Bosshard (NU5D)
Exec 1 series - don't think I have a book, but might have microfische. 
Steve.

Rpage wrote:
 Can anyone identify the receiver in the photo section , UHF GE Repeater ?
 http://ph.groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/photos
 There is no identification info stamped on or inside the receiver.
 The exciter board is 4EG21F1
 Any info would be helpfull.
 Thanks.

   
begin:vcard
fn:Steve Bosshard
n:Bosshard;Steve
email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
tel;work:254-773-1102
tel;fax:254-773-1174
tel;home:254-770-0111
tel;cell:254-624-4230
version:2.1
end:vcard



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID this tower

2007-06-05 Thread Mathew Quaife
Hi Tom, that is a Pirod tower made here in Plymouth Indiana.  The top has been 
modified.  There should be a 3 digit number along one of the legs, and possibly 
a plate near the bottom.  The bolts that goes into the ground is about $140.00 
a piece.  You will find them here..

http://www.valmont.com/asp/communication/specialty_structures/asp/pirod.asp

Mathew


Thomas Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 
Need to ID this tower and get an engeneering drawing for the base  it is 150' 
overall.  Any help would be appreciated.
  
  
 http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010155.jpg
  
 http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010154.jpg
  
  
 http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010148.jpg
  
  
 http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010145.jpg
  
  
 thanks
  
 tom
  
  
 Thomas Oliver
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 EarthLink Revolves Around You.
  
 

 
   

   
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Shape Yahoo! in your own image.  Join our Network Research Panel today!

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID this tower

2007-06-05 Thread Thomas Oliver
I have been in contact with them and they could not supply me a drawing without 
original owners name location age and serial number none of witch I knew.  I 
can't believe they don't have a stock drawing for that series of tower.

Any other suggestions?

I really need to know what goes in the ground and what sticks out of the 
cement.  I don't want to guess.


tom


- Original Message - 
From: Mathew Quaife 
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: 6/5/2007 11:06:20 AM 
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID this tower


Hi Tom, that is a Pirod tower made here in Plymouth Indiana.  The top has been 
modified.  There should be a 3 digit number along one of the legs, and possibly 
a plate near the bottom.  The bolts that goes into the ground is about $140.00 
a piece.  You will find them here..

http://www.valmont.com/asp/communication/specialty_structures/asp/pirod.asp

Mathew


Thomas Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Need to ID this tower and get an engeneering drawing for the base  it is 150' 
overall.  Any help would be appreciated.


http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010155.jpg

http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010154.jpg


http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010148.jpg


http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010145.jpg


thanks

tom


Thomas Oliver
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
EarthLink Revolves Around You.





Shape Yahoo! in your own image. Join our Network Research Panel today!  

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID this tower

2007-06-05 Thread Mathew Quaife
The bolts on my tower which is 120' has six bolts.  Each bolt was 48, of which 
40 went into the concrete.  The tower is about 4 from the ground.  Measure 
the bottom plate, if it is under 4, then you would not want the tower to be 
more than 2 from the concrete.  My base plates are 6 x 8 and was recommended 
to be 4 from the concrete.

In the early days of Pirod, they numbered the towers only by stock numbers, all 
the other information went with the owner of the tower.  After some time they 
started putting plates on their towers which would give them the information of 
where the tower was placed, all the information about it, etc

We have two pirod towers, one was a 100' and the other a 120' tower.  The 100' 
had the plate, it was only about 10 years old when I got it 3 years ago.  The 
120' tower was over 20 years old, and there was no plate information on it.

Call them back, ask them for a description of a typical tower at 150' with a 
leg spread of I think it was 52.  Tell them you are not looking for 
engineering, just simple guide lines.  I can't remember the lady I spoke to, I 
think her name was Marilyn, or something along those lines.  She was very 
helpful.

Mathew


Thomas Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 I have been in contact with them and they could not supply me a drawing 
without original owners name location age and serial number none of witch I 
knew.  I can't believe they don't have a stock drawing for that series of tower.
  
 Any other suggestions?
  
 I really need to know what goes in the ground and what sticks out of the 
cement.  I don't want to guess.
  
  
 tom
  
 

  
  - Original Message - 
 From: Mathew Quaife 
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: 6/5/2007 11:06:20 AM 
 Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID this tower
 

Hi Tom, that is a Pirod tower made here in Plymouth Indiana.  The top has been 
modified.  There should be a 3 digit number along one of the legs, and possibly 
a plate near the bottom.  The bolts that goes into the ground is about $140.00 
a piece.  You will find them here..

http://www.valmont.com/asp/communication/specialty_structures/asp/pirod.asp

Mathew


Thomas Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:   
 
 Need to ID this tower and get an engeneering drawing for the base  it is 150' 
overall.  Any help would be appreciated.
  
  
 http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010155.jpg
  
 http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010154.jpg
  
  
 http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010148.jpg
  
  
 http://i151.photobucket.com/albums/s121/n8ies/P1010145.jpg
  
  
 thanks
  
 tom
  
  
 Thomas Oliver
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 EarthLink Revolves Around You.
  
 
 


  

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Try the Yahoo! Mail Beta.

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help ID this tower

2007-06-05 Thread Max Slover
Since someone did identify this as Pirod tower...

Don't know if this will help but I found spec sheets
from the Pirod catalog at this site. 

http://www.risatech.com/risatower.asp

The file is a self extracting zip that has pdf's from
their catalog. Includes the tower bases and other
tower products. 

Max...

--- Thomas Oliver [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Need to ID this tower and get an engeneering drawing
 for the base  it is 150' overall.  Any help would be
 appreciated.
 
 


Public Information Officer -- St. Louis  Suburban Radio Club
K0AZV - Amateur
WPWH-650 GMRS 
St. Louis County ARES
St. Ann MO EM48tr


Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !

2007-06-04 Thread Milt
Trunking Micor 800 MHz PA.  Power levels started at 35 watts up to 75 watts. If 
you are interested, give me a few days and I should be able to find a complete 
manual.  

Milt 
N3LTQ
  - Original Message - 
  From: Mike Morris 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2007 7:50 PM
  Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !


  ARRG.

  Thanks Chuck... 
  I'm wy too used to FTP where it's 
(servername)/repeater-builder/wa6ilq/name-that-pa 

  Folks, try this:
   http://www.repeater-builder.com/wa6ilq/name-that-pa

  Mike WA6ILQ

  At 04:03 PM 06/03/07, you wrote:

You forgot the .com in the URL. All I can say is it's Motorola.
 
Chuck
WB2EDV
 
 
 

  - Original Message - 

  From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ 

  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 

  Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2007 6:41 PM

  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !


  In past postings and articles on repeater-builder I've referred to 

  locals and local systems... one of the locals that has helped 

  me on an article or two emailed me with a question and some 

  pictures... 


  Can anyone help identify this amplifier? 


  See the 9 photos at  http://www.repeater-builder/wa6ilq/name-that-pa

  Each one is about 460-480KB each

  The first one may be all someone has to look at.


  Thanks in advance...


  Mike WA6ILQ


  At 08:08 PM 06/02/07, you wrote:

I have a PA I acquired but have no idea what it is. It's 19 rack mount 

and about 4 rack units high.   It uses N connectors for RF in/Out 



Stamped on the heat sink is 64E82631N02 F



The input is TRN8852A uses a M9875 device

Next stage is a TRN8853A uses a M9876 device

Next stage is a TRN5268

Goes through a directional coupler? TRN8856A

Then it goes to another combiner, I'm sure it has a fancy name, the 
board number is 84D82462N01

Then it combines 2 modules, one is another TRN5268B the other is a 
TRN4939

Then a circulator? 42B82633N01-A

Then through a filter?

Then out the N connector.



Can you tell anything by this info?

Looking for band, and power levels of the various stages.

Knowing what Moto book it is covered in would be a blessing...  

Thanks in advance.


   

Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !

2007-06-03 Thread Chuck Kelsey
You forgot the .com in the URL. All I can say is it's Motorola.

Chuck
WB2EDV



  - Original Message - 
  From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2007 6:41 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !


  In past postings and articles on repeater-builder I've referred to 
  locals and local systems... one of the locals that has helped 
  me on an article or two emailed me with a question and some 
  pictures... 

  Can anyone help identify this amplifier? 

  See the 9 photos at  http://www.repeater-builder/wa6ilq/name-that-pa
  Each one is about 460-480KB each
  The first one may be all someone has to look at.

  Thanks in advance...

  Mike WA6ILQ

  At 08:08 PM 06/02/07, you wrote:

I have a PA I acquired but have no idea what it is. It's 19 rack mount 
and about 4 rack units high.   It uses N connectors for RF in/Out 
 
Stamped on the heat sink is 64E82631N02 F
 
The input is TRN8852A uses a M9875 device
Next stage is a TRN8853A uses a M9876 device
Next stage is a TRN5268
Goes through a directional coupler? TRN8856A
Then it goes to another combiner, I'm sure it has a fancy name, the board 
number is 84D82462N01
Then it combines 2 modules, one is another TRN5268B the other is a TRN4939
Then a circulator? 42B82633N01-A
Then through a filter?
Then out the N connector.
 
Can you tell anything by this info?
Looking for band, and power levels of the various stages.
Knowing what Moto book it is covered in would be a blessing...  
Thanks in advance.

   

Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !

2007-06-03 Thread Mike Morris

ARRG.

Thanks Chuck...
I'm wy too used to FTP where it's 
(servername)/repeater-builder/wa6ilq/name-that-pa


Folks, try this:
 http://www.repeater-builder.com/wa6ilq/name-that-pa

Mike WA6ILQ

At 04:03 PM 06/03/07, you wrote:

You forgot the .com in the URL. All I can say is it's Motorola.

Chuck
WB2EDV



- Original Message -
From: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]Mike Morris WA6ILQ
To: mailto:Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.comRepeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2007 6:41 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !

In past postings and articles on repeater-builder I've referred to
locals and local systems... one of the locals that has helped
me on an article or two emailed me with a question and some
pictures...

Can anyone help identify this amplifier?

See the 9 photos at  http://www.repeater-builder/wa6ilq/name-that-pa
Each one is about 460-480KB each
The first one may be all someone has to look at.

Thanks in advance...

Mike WA6ILQ

At 08:08 PM 06/02/07, you wrote:

I have a PA I acquired but have no idea what it is. It's 19 rack mount
and about 4 rack units high.   It uses N connectors for RF in/Out

Stamped on the heat sink is 64E82631N02 F

The input is TRN8852A uses a M9875 device
Next stage is a TRN8853A uses a M9876 device
Next stage is a TRN5268
Goes through a directional coupler? TRN8856A
Then it goes to another combiner, I'm sure it has a fancy name, the 
board number is 84D82462N01

Then it combines 2 modules, one is another TRN5268B the other is a TRN4939
Then a circulator? 42B82633N01-A
Then through a filter?
Then out the N connector.

Can you tell anything by this info?
Looking for band, and power levels of the various stages.
Knowing what Moto book it is covered in would be a blessing...
Thanks in advance.





Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !

2007-06-03 Thread Bryon Jeffers K0BSJ
That is a Micor vintage 800 Mhz PA... Some of those stations used these to 
drive the Klystron final as well...


Bryon KØBSJ

At 05:41 PM 6/3/2007, you wrote:

In past postings and articles on repeater-builder I've referred to
locals and local systems... one of the locals that has helped
me on an article or two emailed me with a question and some
pictures...

Can anyone help identify this amplifier?

See the 9 photos at  http://www.repeater-builder/wa6ilq/name-that-pa
Each one is about 460-480KB each
The first one may be all someone has to look at.

Thanks in advance...

Mike WA6ILQ

At 08:08 PM 06/02/07, you wrote:

I have a PA I acquired but have no idea what it is. It's 19 rack mount
and about 4 rack units high.   It uses N connectors for RF in/Out

Stamped on the heat sink is 64E82631N02 F

The input is TRN8852A uses a M9875 device
Next stage is a TRN8853A uses a M9876 device
Next stage is a TRN5268
Goes through a directional coupler? TRN8856A
Then it goes to another combiner, I'm sure it has a fancy name, the board 
number is 84D82462N01

Then it combines 2 modules, one is another TRN5268B the other is a TRN4939
Then a circulator? 42B82633N01-A
Then through a filter?
Then out the N connector.

Can you tell anything by this info?
Looking for band, and power levels of the various stages.
Knowing what Moto book it is covered in would be a blessing...
Thanks in advance.





Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !

2007-06-03 Thread mch
Forgot to add: Micor vintage.

Joe M.

 Chuck Kelsey wrote:
 
 You forgot the .com in the URL. All I can say is it's Motorola.
 
 Chuck
 WB2EDV
 
 
 
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
  Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2007 6:41 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name
  this PA !
 
  In past postings and articles on repeater-builder I've
  referred to
  locals and local systems... one of the locals that has
  helped
  me on an article or two emailed me with a question and some
  pictures...
 
  Can anyone help identify this amplifier?
 
  See the 9 photos at 
  http://www.repeater-builder/wa6ilq/name-that-pa
  Each one is about 460-480KB each
  The first one may be all someone has to look at.
 
  Thanks in advance...
 
  Mike WA6ILQ
 
  At 08:08 PM 06/02/07, you wrote:
 
   I have a PA I acquired but have no idea what it is. It's
   19 rack mount
   and about 4 rack units high.   It uses N connectors for RF
   in/Out
 
   Stamped on the heat sink is 64E82631N02 F
 
   The input is TRN8852A uses a M9875 device
   Next stage is a TRN8853A uses a M9876 device
   Next stage is a TRN5268
   Goes through a directional coupler? TRN8856A
   Then it goes to another combiner, I'm sure it has a fancy
   name, the board number is 84D82462N01
   Then it combines 2 modules, one is another TRN5268B the
   other is a TRN4939
   Then a circulator? 42B82633N01-A
   Then through a filter?
   Then out the N connector.
 
   Can you tell anything by this info?
   Looking for band, and power levels of the various stages.
   Knowing what Moto book it is covered in would be a
   blessing...
   Thanks in advance.
 
 


Re: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name this PA !

2007-06-03 Thread mch
Looks like a Motorola 800 MHz high(er) power amp.

Joe M.

 Chuck Kelsey wrote:
 
 You forgot the .com in the URL. All I can say is it's Motorola.
 
 Chuck
 WB2EDV
 
 
 
 
  - Original Message -
  From: Mike Morris WA6ILQ
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
  Sent: Sunday, June 03, 2007 6:41 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] HELP - Photo collection: Name
  this PA !
 
  In past postings and articles on repeater-builder I've
  referred to
  locals and local systems... one of the locals that has
  helped
  me on an article or two emailed me with a question and some
  pictures...
 
  Can anyone help identify this amplifier?
 
  See the 9 photos at 
  http://www.repeater-builder/wa6ilq/name-that-pa
  Each one is about 460-480KB each
  The first one may be all someone has to look at.
 
  Thanks in advance...
 
  Mike WA6ILQ
 
  At 08:08 PM 06/02/07, you wrote:
 
   I have a PA I acquired but have no idea what it is. It's
   19 rack mount
   and about 4 rack units high.   It uses N connectors for RF
   in/Out
 
   Stamped on the heat sink is 64E82631N02 F
 
   The input is TRN8852A uses a M9875 device
   Next stage is a TRN8853A uses a M9876 device
   Next stage is a TRN5268
   Goes through a directional coupler? TRN8856A
   Then it goes to another combiner, I'm sure it has a fancy
   name, the board number is 84D82462N01
   Then it combines 2 modules, one is another TRN5268B the
   other is a TRN4939
   Then a circulator? 42B82633N01-A
   Then through a filter?
   Then out the N connector.
 
   Can you tell anything by this info?
   Looking for band, and power levels of the various stages.
   Knowing what Moto book it is covered in would be a
   blessing...
   Thanks in advance.
 
 


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with radius m120 vhf 2ch interfacing

2007-05-11 Thread Bob M.
The maxtrac interfacing article on r-b by Scott
KB0NLY had information and photos. There are really
only two styles of logic board: those that have just
the masked CPU (one big chip) and no shield, and those
that have the CPU, an ASIC, an EPROM, etc, all in a
shielded area. Your 5173A should match one of those
two board layouts, I suspect it's got the shielded
area.

There's a row of feedthru holes inside the shielded
area, in the lower left corner, that will either be
all in-line, or with some offset. It doesn't matter;
the left-most hole is a signal called RX MUTE. This is
low when the radio is squelched and goes high when the
radio is unsquelched and passing audio. This means it
will only go high when the incoming signal has the
proper coded squelch and the MONitor button is set for
normal operation. If you press the MONitor button to
put the radio in carrier squelch, then the RX MUTE
line won't care about PL or DPL. Also, if you press
and hold the MONitor button to open the squelch, the
RX MUTE line will go high and stay there.

Use a 4.7k resistor and a common NPN transistor to
invert and buffer the RX MUTE signal. Bring the
collector out through the MIC jack on pin 1 and use
that as the COR signal for your controller. You can't
get a separate PL/DPL detect line; it's just not
available outside the microprocessor.

I've been modifying MaxTracs and Radiuses this way for
years and it works great for repeater use.

Bob M.
==
--- Jay Urish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 I just picke dup a few of these little gems and I
 want to build a 
 temporary portable lunchbox repeater in case my main
 machine croaks or 
 incase I am in a weak coverage area--
 
 These have the HLN5173A logic boards-- I was on RB
 and I saw a couple of 
 articles on how to bring the important signals out..
 However, none of 
 the articles addressed my logic board directly.
 
 I have the 5pin board and I think I want to make
 this a sdown and dirty 
 as possible.. I will just cut one end off of a db-9
 serial extension 
 cable and run it out the back hole of the radio.
 
 I need the usual stuff-- ptt/cor/audioin-out and I
 really want to find a 
 place for PL detect as well..
 
 Does anybody have a pic of the board showing
 where/how they tapped and 
 flipped the logic to make this fly?
 -- 
 Jay Urish W5GM
 ARRL Life Member  Denton County ARRL VEC
 N5ERS VP/Trustee  
 
 Monitoring 444.850 PL-88.5


   
Give
 spam the boot. Take control with tough spam protection in the all-new Yahoo! 
Mail Beta.
http://advision.webevents.yahoo.com/mailbeta/newmail_html.html 


RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help me in selecting a GMRS repeater antenna

2007-04-27 Thread N9WYS
Rather than doing that, I'd stay with the tri-pod, but reinforce it...  Use
3/8 (or heavier) threaded rod to go through the roof deck itself, and
extend down enough to go through a 2x4 which is placed across several roof
rafters.  The 2x4 will cause any strain on the tower to be distributed
across several roof rafters rather than at a single point.  Do this for all
legs of the tower.

I used a quad beam antenna and rotor mounted on a three-leg tower on the
roof of my dad's garage 30+ years ago - back in my 11-meter days - and I
never lost the antenna or tower due to high winds.  I drilled through the
single rafter that the one leg mounted above to allow for the cross-beam.
The other two legs fell between rafters...

Mark - N9WYS

-Original Message-
From: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com On Behalf Of Preston Moore

Anyone have any suggestions on an antenna for GMRS
repeater use.  This repeater will be at my residence
and the antenna will be mounted on a 5-foot tripod on
the roof.  I have a DB-420 and was successful in
getting it mounted, but I felt it was just slightly
too heavy.  I was afraid it would come down in a
strong wind.  

Can I use just the top section of the DB-420 without
changing the phasing harness?  If not, can someone
please suggest a decent antenna?  

Antenna tripod mount is at about the 40-foot level and
height really does not matter.  I have a $500 antenna
budget.  

Thanks 
Preston Moore



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help me in selecting a GMRS repeater antenna

2007-04-27 Thread Maire-Radios
well I have been using DB 420 for years and they are about the best you can 
get.  mount your mount for the wind load for your $500 and you will be better 
off.  Also I don't think 1/2 the 420 would work like it is make.

John


  - Original Message - 
  From: Preston Moore 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Friday, April 27, 2007 5:42 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help me in selecting a GMRS repeater antenna


  Anyone have any suggestions on an antenna for GMRS
  repeater use. This repeater will be at my residence
  and the antenna will be mounted on a 5-foot tripod on
  the roof. I have a DB-420 and was successful in
  getting it mounted, but I felt it was just slightly
  too heavy. I was afraid it would come down in a
  strong wind. 

  Can I use just the top section of the DB-420 without
  changing the phasing harness? If not, can someone
  please suggest a decent antenna? 

  Antenna tripod mount is at about the 40-foot level and
  height really does not matter. I have a $500 antenna
  budget. 

  Thanks 
  Preston Moore

  __
  Do You Yahoo!?
  Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around 
  http://mail.yahoo.com 


   

Re: [Repeater-Builder] help?marconi rc690.

2007-03-15 Thread IM Ashford
Marconi RC690 is a 25w AM radio.
Perhaps thats why your rx audio is so bad,its slope detecting the FM.
You could use the radios just talking to each other on an AM only net...

Ian G8PWE
UK

  - Original Message - 
  From: vince 
  To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com 
  Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2007 5:46 PM
  Subject: [Repeater-Builder] help?marconi rc690.


  hi can any one help pls i have 6 marconi rc690s vhf.all on 2m. thay 
  all trainsmit on the corrcet freqs and recive,but the audio sounds 
  like muffled,like in the back of the box. u can just make out what 
  people r saying .any one ever converted one b4?from what i know, this 
  is all u need to do is to change 1 epprom, witch was done on 2m. i was 
  told no ajustment was req? any help pls i am stuck i have been doing 
  this for over a year,this is all i need to get them all 
  working.thanks vince 73s 



   

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help CG Decoder Mastr ExecII

2007-02-01 Thread w5zit
I am not familiar with your particular CG decoder, but I would guess 
that it is a phase lock loop type decoder, and you are adjusting the 
pot to set the center frequency of the PLL decoder. I have had best 
luck when adjusting this type decoder by having the normal 
discriminator noise at the input of the decoder and adjusting the loop 
frequency with a counter on the PLL test point. Fish around with a 
scope and find a place on the decoder that you can count, using a 10:1 
probe to avoid loading the test point, and put the same 10:1 probe on 
your counter for the final count adjustment. I have a digital 
multimeter with an internal counter function that will count the low 
frequency just fine.

When the adjustment is finished, input a signal generator with about 12 
dB quieting and modulate it with your 103.5 tone at 500 Hz deviation 
and verify that the tone is detected. Then change the tone frequency to 
100 Hz and verify that this tone is not detected, and likewise change 
to the 107.x tone and verify that it is not detected. If the tone above 
or below the correct frequency is detected, remove the input signal 
 from the receiver and adjust the at-rest frequency up or down to favor 
the direction the detector needs to go. Then repeat the process to 
check for proper decode of only the desired frequency.

A final test is to put the 103.5 tone back in the generator and add a 1 
kHz tone at the same time and bring the total deviation up to 5 kHz and 
verify that the decoder is still working. If you have a level control 
between the decoder and the discriminator input you can jocky with the 
level to allow decode while the input deviation is varied over the 
range you expect to see. Sometimes a PL type decoder will drop out 
under voice peaks if the level to the decoder is set too high.

I hope this helps -

73 - Jim W5ZIT

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wed, 31 Jan 2007 9:35 PM
Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help CG Decoder Mastr ExecII



Hello, anybody of you can tell me how can I retune the band pass filter 
on CG Decoder into Mastr ExecII?

This module is made by Glenayre for GE and the part # is 134D6663G1 (G2 
 G3)

The module is set to decode CG only.



I want to tune at 103.5Hz. and I use another encoder for the TX.



Maybe the best procedure is to put jumper to force the module to encode 
at 103.5 and after adjust the band pass decode pot for the best 
decoding…



If you have other solution, let me know.





Thank you.

Eric VE2VXT

Check Out the new free AIM(R) Mail -- 2 GB of storage and 
industry-leading spam and email virus protection.


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help CG Decoder Mastr ExecII

2007-02-01 Thread Jim B.
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Wed, 31 Jan 2007 9:35 PM
 Subject: [Repeater-Builder] Help CG Decoder Mastr ExecII
 
 Hello, anybody of you can tell me how can I retune the band pass filter 
 on CG Decoder into Mastr ExecII?
 This module is made by Glenayre for GE and the part # is 134D6663G1 (G2 
  G3)
 The module is set to decode CG only.
 I want to tune at 103.5Hz. and I use another encoder for the TX.
 Maybe the best procedure is to put jumper to force the module to encode 
 at 103.5 and after adjust the band pass decode pot for the best 
 decoding…
 If you have other solution, let me know.

A CTCSS board from a GE ExecII is NOT going to be tunable. I suspect 
there is one pot on it, and it will be an encode output level adjustment.
There were a couple of different means of determining the tone 
frequency. The oldest may have a large mechanical reed that acts like a 
tuning fork. The most likely style will have a small white ceramic chip 
that has a tuned circuit in it. Either one will be labeled with the tone 
freq it's on, and if it's not what you want, it will need to be changed.
There was also a crystal controlled unit that looks like a small round 
metal-cased IC. Again, it would need to be changed.
There were also some newer ones that used a bank of dip switches. If you 
have one of those, consider yourself lucky! They are a bit more rare. 
For those, poke around maybe Repeater-builder, Doug Hall's GE reference 
page, or others and you'll probably find a chart to set the switches for 
the tone you want.

-- 
Jim Barbour
WD8CHL



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help CG Decoder Mastr ExecII

2007-02-01 Thread Jim B.
  The most likely style will have a small white ceramic chip
 that has a tuned circuit in it.

It's called a 'Versatone' by the way...
-- 
Jim Barbour
WD8CHL



Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help in identifying

2006-11-28 Thread Nate Duehr
Mark Tomany wrote:
 I have what I believe is a circulator/isolator that I would like to
 identify.  
 
 It is big and heavy, meaning it measures 13W x 4 5/8H x 1 7/8D, and
 weighs about 15 lbs.  
 
 The label says: Microwave Associates, a M/A Com company
  Serial: 1009
  Model J-210
 
 It has three ports, one marked INPUT another marked OUTPUT and a third on
 the bottom with the marking obliterated.  Next to the unknown port are two
 other studs that look like solid ports with the center conductor soldered.
 The connectors are N type, which leads me to think its UHF maybe...
 
 Any way of knowing for sure?  There was a paper label which has deteriorated
 over the years and is now nearly illegible.  Looks like is says either 160
 or 460 MHz, the rest is completely unreadable.
 
 I can provide photos upon request.
 
 Thanks, 
 Mark - N9WYS

In 1978 Microwave Associates legally changed its name to M/A-COM, Inc. 
to reflect its involvement in the growing communications market.

M/A-COM
1011 Pawtucket Blvd.
Lowell, Massachusetts 01853
UNITED STATES
Phone: 978-442-5000
Fax: 978-442-5350

For RF/Microwave Products, contact us at:
Americas -- Phone: 1-800-366-2266

http://www.macom.com/psc/jsp/SearchParts.jsp - came up blank on the part 
  number.

Judging by the name still being Microwave Associates, you're going to 
have to find an old-timer to figure out what that thing is.

Nate WY0X


Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help in identifying

2006-11-28 Thread Ken Arck

If you decide you don't want/need it, I'd take it off your hands.

Write me offlist if interested.

Ken


At 03:32 PM 11/28/2006, you wrote:


I have what I believe is a circulator/isolator that I would like to
identify.

It is big and heavy, meaning it measures 13W x 4 5/8H x 1 7/8D, and
weighs about 15 lbs.

The label says: Microwave Associates, a M/A Com company
Serial: 1009
Model J-210

It has three ports, one marked INPUT another marked OUTPUT and a third on
the bottom with the marking obliterated. Next to the unknown port are two
other studs that look like solid ports with the center conductor soldered.
The connectors are N type, which leads me to think its UHF maybe...

Any way of knowing for sure? There was a paper label which has deteriorated
over the years and is now nearly illegible. Looks like is says either 160
or 460 MHz, the rest is completely unreadable.

I can provide photos upon request.

Thanks,
Mark - N9WYS




--
President and CTO - Arcom Communications
Makers of the world famous RC210 Repeater Controller and accessories.
http://www.ah6le.net/arcom/index.html
Authorized Dealers for Kenwood and Telewave and
we offer complete repeater packages!
AH6LE/R - IRLP Node 3000
http://www.irlp.net

Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help in identifying

2006-11-28 Thread Glenn Little WB4UIV
I work at a TV station that uses a Harris TV30L channel 4 TV transmitter. 
It has a circulator between the visual driver and PA. It is deeper that the 
one that you describe, but it uses type N fittings and is in the 70 MHz range.

The connector indicates quality in this case.

 From the size, I would suspect 150-160 MHz range.

Is there a way to retune these to a more useful frequency?

73
Glenn
WB4UIV

At 06:32 PM 11/28/06, you wrote:
I have what I believe is a circulator/isolator that I would like to
identify.

It is big and heavy, meaning it measures 13W x 4 5/8H x 1 7/8D, and
weighs about 15 lbs.

The label says: Microwave Associates, a M/A Com company
  Serial: 1009
Model J-210

It has three ports, one marked INPUT another marked OUTPUT and a third on
the bottom with the marking obliterated.  Next to the unknown port are two
other studs that look like solid ports with the center conductor soldered.
The connectors are N type, which leads me to think its UHF maybe...

Any way of knowing for sure?  There was a paper label which has deteriorated
over the years and is now nearly illegible.  Looks like is says either 160
or 460 MHz, the rest is completely unreadable.

I can provide photos upon request.

Thanks,
Mark - N9WYS









Yahoo! Groups Links







Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread Jim Brown


Hi Jim

Sorry but I never saw an email from you (we are quite good at providing
timely responses when we're aware of a question!). My apologies for your
request not being answered up to this point.

I'm not exactly sure what you're asking. Are you saying you're having
problems with NetMedia's program (the BasicX program) or with being able to
actually upload the firmware to the controller?

Ken

Ken, the program referenced in the manual to download (the basicx 
program) downloads all OK, but it has a checksum error (it is a zipped 
file).  I don't think it is an error in the download, as I have 
transferred it several times on two different computers and even had a 
buddy transfer it with the same checksum error.  So I have not been able 
to even attempt to upload the new firmware to the RC-110. 

I emailed you hoping you had an alternate place to download the basicx 
program, or had a copy there that I could download.

I must be on your spam list, as I have emailed you several times over 
the last two years and only had one response last winter.  My request 
for the above was last week.

The 3.1 firmware will reboot the controller at random intervals when 
entering a command via TT, and will fail to turn on the audio gate to 
the repeater or remote base occasionally so just get a dead carrier.

Has the Yahoo group been de-activated for the RC-110?  I get no response 
from the moderator.

Thanks

73 - Jim  [EMAIL PROTECTED]




 
Yahoo! Groups Links

* To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/

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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread Ken Arck
At 08:39 AM 5/15/2006 -0500, you wrote:
Ken, the program referenced in the manual to download (the basicx 
program) downloads all OK, but it has a checksum error (it is a zipped 
file).  I don't think it is an error in the download, as I have 
transferred it several times on two different computers and even had a 
buddy transfer it with the same checksum error.  So I have not been able 
to even attempt to upload the new firmware to the RC-110. 

---Hi Jim. Well, we have no connection (nor control) with NetMedia and you
need to contact them directly about their software. I'm afraid I don't know
of an alternate download source for the software other than them.

Have you tried contacting them?

Ken
--
President and CTO - Arcom Communications
Makers of the world famous RC210 Repeater Controller and accessories.
http://www.ah6le.net/arcom/index.html
COME SEE US AT DAYTON 2006 in the Repeater Builder tent!
Authorized Dealers for Kenwood and Telewave and
we offer complete repeater packages!
AH6LE/R - IRLP Node 3000
http://www.irlp.net




 
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* To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/

* To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread Jim Brown


---Hi Jim. Well, we have no connection (nor control) with NetMedia and you
need to contact them directly about their software. I'm afraid I don't know
of an alternate download source for the software other than them.

Have you tried contacting them?

Ken


Ken, how does Arcom upload the operating firmware into the RC-110?  The 
checksum error has been present on the file I download from NetMedia for 
over two years, as I have been trying to get a working copy for that long.

Could I get a copy of the upload program from Arcom that works?

73 - Jim




 
Yahoo! Groups Links

* To visit your group on the web, go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Repeater-Builder/

* To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread wa6rqd
Jim Brown wrote:

---Hi Jim. Well, we have no connection (nor control) with NetMedia and you
need to contact them directly about their software. I'm afraid I don't know
of an alternate download source for the software other than them.

Have you tried contacting them?

Ken

 
 
 Ken, how does Arcom upload the operating firmware into the RC-110?  The 
 checksum error has been present on the file I download from NetMedia for 
 over two years, as I have been trying to get a working copy for that long.
 
 Could I get a copy of the upload program from Arcom that works?
 
 73 - Jim


Jim,

I do not have any of Ken's controllers to play with, but I did try 
downloading the BasicX program only (downloader, compiler,  editor) 
file (bx-setup-210-program.zip 3.992megs) and installed it without a 
problem. I can't say that it works as I do not have a device to load, 
but it does start and appears to be OK.

Ed Yoho
WA6RQD




 
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* To visit your group on the web, go to:
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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread Bob Dengler
At 5/15/2006 10:26 AM, you wrote:
 
  Ken, how does Arcom upload the operating firmware into the RC-110?  The
  checksum error has been present on the file I download from NetMedia for
  over two years, as I have been trying to get a working copy for that long.
 
  Could I get a copy of the upload program from Arcom that works?
 
  73 - Jim
 

Jim,

I do not have any of Ken's controllers to play with, but I did try
downloading the BasicX program only (downloader, compiler,  editor)
file (bx-setup-210-program.zip 3.992megs) and installed it without a
problem. I can't say that it works as I do not have a device to load,
but it does start and appears to be OK.

Ed Yoho
WA6RQD

I purchased a complete BX-24 development system a couple of years ago  had 
no problem uploading my program into the BX-24.  I also just downloaded the 
downloader from http://www.basicx.com/downloads/bx-setup-210-program.zip, 
installed it  compared the files to the ones I used during development; 
they're identical.

Bob NO6B






 
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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread Ken Arck
At 11:47 AM 5/15/2006 -0500, you wrote:

Ken, how does Arcom upload the operating firmware into the RC-110?  The 
checksum error has been present on the file I download from NetMedia for 
over two years, as I have been trying to get a working copy for that long.

-We use the BasicX program ourselves (NetMedia are the authors of the
BasicX program).

Could I get a copy of the upload program from Arcom that works?

As far as I know, the only place to download the BasicX software is
from their website.

Again, have you contacted THEM about the problem you're having with THEIR
software?

Ken
--
President and CTO - Arcom Communications
Makers of the world famous RC210 Repeater Controller and accessories.
http://www.ah6le.net/arcom/index.html
COME SEE US AT DAYTON 2006 in the Repeater Builder tent!
Authorized Dealers for Kenwood and Telewave and
we offer complete repeater packages!
AH6LE/R - IRLP Node 3000
http://www.irlp.net




 
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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread Mike Perryman
This is exactly the same method I used for my RC-110.  I have since 
upgraded to a RC-210 and have discarded the software or I would pass it 
along.  I guess I could look for it...  or you can download the developers 
package as I did.

73,
Mike

At 11:35 AM 05/15/2006 -0700, you wrote:
At 5/15/2006 10:26 AM, you wrote:
  
   Ken, how does Arcom upload the operating firmware into the RC-110?  The
   checksum error has been present on the file I download from NetMedia for
   over two years, as I have been trying to get a working copy for that 
 long.
  
   Could I get a copy of the upload program from Arcom that works?
  
   73 - Jim
  
 
 Jim,
 
 I do not have any of Ken's controllers to play with, but I did try
 downloading the BasicX program only (downloader, compiler,  editor)
 file (bx-setup-210-program.zip 3.992megs) and installed it without a
 problem. I can't say that it works as I do not have a device to load,
 but it does start and appears to be OK.
 
 Ed Yoho
 WA6RQD

I purchased a complete BX-24 development system a couple of years ago  had
no problem uploading my program into the BX-24.  I also just downloaded the
downloader from http://www.basicx.com/downloads/bx-setup-210-program.zip,
installed it  compared the files to the ones I used during development;
they're identical.

Bob NO6B







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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread Robin Midgett
Jim,
I have a working copy...at least it unzips correctly using PKZip. I 
tried unzipping it with Ken Ward's Zip utility..it wouldn't do the job.
The unzipped file is here for you, under Amateur Radio Gear Info
http://www.people.vanderbilt.edu/~robin.midgett/index.htm



At 10:47 AM 5/15/2006, you wrote:
 
 
 ---Hi Jim. Well, we have no connection (nor control) with 
 NetMedia and you need to contact them directly about their 
 software. I'm afraid I don't know of an alternate download source 
 for the software other than them.
 
 Have you tried contacting them?
 
 Ken
 

Ken, how does Arcom upload the operating firmware into the 
RC-110?  The checksum error has been present on the file I download 
from NetMedia for over two years, as I have been trying to get a 
working copy for that long.

Could I get a copy of the upload program from Arcom that works?

73 - Jim





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Thanks,
Robin Midgett K4IDC
615-322-5836 office - rolls to pager
615-835-7699 pager
615-301-1642 home
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.people.vanderbilt.edu/~robin.midgett/index.htm 





 
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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-15 Thread Jim Brown


I purchased a complete BX-24 development system a couple of years ago  had 
no problem uploading my program into the BX-24.  I also just downloaded the 
downloader from http://www.basicx.com/downloads/bx-setup-210-program.zip, 
installed it  compared the files to the ones I used during development; 
they're identical.

Bob NO6B


Bob, I downloaded the file you indicated above and the update for the 
RC-110 to ver 4.0 worked like a charm.  Thanks a bunch for the correct 
upload file name.  My manual for the RC-110 shows that I needed to download:

http://www.basicx.com/beta/bx_setup_210b2.zip

This file has the checksum error and is where I have been getting stuck 
for a year or so.  If I had been given the correct file to download I 
would have been in good shape.  Arcom never would respond with the 
information on which file I should use in place of the one they give in 
the 110 manual they supplied.  I don't find an updated RC-110 manual at 
the Arcom site either, so I was stuck

Thanks again to the group, and to you Bob for the specific info I needed.

73 - Jim  W5ZIT




 
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Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help on Arcom RC-110

2006-05-14 Thread Ken Arck
Hi Jim

Sorry but I never saw an email from you (we are quite good at providing
timely responses when we're aware of a question!). My apologies for your
request not being answered up to this point.

I'm not exactly sure what you're asking. Are you saying you're having
problems with NetMedia's program (the BasicX program) or with being able to
actually upload the firmware to the controller?

Ken


At 10:34 PM 5/14/2006 -0500, you wrote:
I am trying to upload the 4.0 firmware in my RC-110 and having no luck.  
Queries to Arcom are being ignored with no response.  The controller 
with the ver 3.1 firmware is unusable.

The basicx program referenced in the 110 manual has a checksum if you 
download it and try to unzip.  So no luck in getting the update 
uploaded.  The controller uses ver 3.1 now and I want to put ver 4.0 in 
it.  It exhibits some of the same problems that the RC-210 had when it 
was first released.  The 210 problems seemed to clear up with the upload 
of the later firmware.  I hope the later firmware for the 110 will do 
the same.

I have tried to join the Yahoo group for the RC-110 and get no response 
from the moderator there either.

Any advice would be appreciated.

73 - Jim - [EMAIL PROTECTED]




 
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--
President and CTO - Arcom Communications
Makers of the world famous RC210 Repeater Controller and accessories.
http://www.ah6le.net/arcom/index.html
COME SEE US AT DAYTON 2006 in the Repeater Builder tent!
Authorized Dealers for Kenwood and Telewave and
we offer complete repeater packages!
AH6LE/R - IRLP Node 3000
http://www.irlp.net




 
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RE: [Repeater-Builder] Help with GE TMX-1000

2006-05-12 Thread Eric Vincent
Thank's Jim for reply,

About DTMF, I use many radios like TH-D7A and other...  I'm sure, I do not
over modulate, I transmit DTMF at ±3.0KHz and modulation with CG at ± 4.7KHz
max.

At this time I have an old Cushman CE-4 to check my system but in past a
beautiful IFR COM-120B will give the same results.

So, I will inform the group if I find other thing about that.

Best 73'
Eric VE2VXT



-Message d'origine-
De : Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] De la part de Jim B.
Envoyé : 11 mai, 2006 09:19
À : Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Objet : Re: [Repeater-Builder] Help with GE TMX-1000

Eric Vincent wrote:

 I use these radios for UHF link and I like to remote control my Echolink
 station via the net.  I was made many tests to pass DTMF but I think the
RX
 CG don?t like DTMF and cut all the time, on and off and on and off...

Either the DTMF you're sending is bad-likely too hot and going into 
clipping-or the receiver isn't aligned properly. Or one end or the other 
is off freq.
-- 
Jim Barbour
WD8CHL





 
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