howto:xband
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| - | ~~NOTOC~~ | ||
| - | ====== Crossband Repeater ====== | ||
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| - | A crossband repeater is different from a regular repeater in two important ways: | ||
| - | * Where as a regular repeater uses the same band with a small offset between the tx and rx frequencies (600 kHz for VHF and 5 MHz for UHF), a crossband repeater uses two frequencies on different bands (one on VHF and the other on UHF for example). | ||
| - | * Where as a regular repeater always listens to the same frequency (the input of the repeater) and always transmits on the other (the output), a crossband repeater transmits on one frequency whatever it hears on the other, whichever it hears first. | ||
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| - | Many higher end dualband radios are capable of doing cross-band repeat (Icom' | ||
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| - | ===== Adhoc Repeater ===== | ||
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| - | Supposing you are in a remote location with no repeater and you have a few people who need to communicate with handheld radios. | ||
| - | {{ howto: | ||
| - | * Both handhelds are set to listen to 446.100 and transmit on 145.565 so that when Unit A transmits on 145.565, | ||
| - | * The crossband repeater hears the 145.565 signal and re-transmits it on 446.100 | ||
| - | * Which Unit B hears, and vice versa. | ||
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| - | In practice, it might be tricky to setup the handhelds to receive on one band and transmit on the other. | ||
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| - | ==== Adhoc Repeater Variation ==== | ||
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| - | There' | ||
| - | {{ howto: | ||
| - | * Here, each handheld uses a different band so there is no need for fancy dual band tx/rx. | ||
| - | * The problem is that you can't add more handhelds (unless they can already hear the others in simplex). | ||
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| - | ===== Repeater Extender ===== | ||
| - | This is a scheme I use often at home with my base station in crossband mode: I tune one receiver to our local repeater, and the other to a simplex UHF frequency. | ||
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| - | {{ howto: | ||
| - | * Unit A transmits and receives on 446.100 (with a tone). | ||
| - | * The crossband repeater hears 446.100 (with a tone squelch) and re-transmits it on 147.**8**20 (the input of the repeater). | ||
| - | * The repeater hears 147.**8**20 and repeaters it on 147.**2**20 (its output) | ||
| - | * Unit B receives 147.**2**20 and replies on 147.**8**20, | ||
| - | * The repeater re-transmits on 147.**2**20 | ||
| - | * The crossband repeater hears 147.**2**20 and re-transmits it on 446.100. | ||
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| - | All that is needed to " | ||
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| - | <WRAP center round important 90%> | ||
| - | One thing to keep in mind with crossband repeat is that the radio doing the repeating is transmitting every time someone transmits. | ||
| - | </ | ||
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| - | ===== Repeater Extender Variation===== | ||
| - | The following is a variation I use when I can hear the repeater with my handheld, but can't transmit to it because of the handheld' | ||
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| - | {{ howto: | ||
| - | The crossband repeater is set up with the input frequency of the repeater without the offset. | ||
| - | * Unit A transmits on 446.100 and receives the repeater' | ||
| - | * The crossband repeater hears 446.100 and re-transmits it on 147.**8**20 (the input of the repeater). | ||
| - | * The repeater hears 147.**8**20 and repeats it on 147.**2**20 (its output) | ||
| - | * Unit B receives 147.**2**20 and replies on 147.**8**20 | ||
| - | * Then, two things happen: | ||
| - | * The repeater hears the signal on 147.**8**20 and re-transmits it on 147.**2**20 but, | ||
| - | * The crossband repeater does NOT hear the signal from the repeater' | ||
| - | * So the crossband repeater stays silent. | ||
| - | * Unit A hears the output of the regular repeater, not the crossband repeater. | ||
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| - | In this configuration, | ||
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| - | ===== Repeater Link ===== | ||
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| - | A crossband repeater can be used to link a VHF and UHF repeater simply by dialing both repeater frequencies (with offset and tones) on the crossband repeater. | ||
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| - | {{ howto: | ||
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| - | <WRAP center round important 90%> | ||
| - | Here again, high transmit duty cycle can be an issue. | ||
| - | </ | ||
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| - | ===== Repeater Link Variation ===== | ||
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| - | Supposing a third handheld (Unit C) is close to the crossband repeater but can't hear either repeaters. | ||
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| - | To reach Unit A, Unit C would need to " | ||
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| - | {{ howto: | ||
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| - | ===== KT-8900 ===== | ||
| - | It's pretty easy to setup a cross band repeater with two KT-8900 radios. | ||
| - | {{ howto: | ||
| - | * The first step is to make an ethernet patch cord with this {{howto: | ||
| - | <WRAP indent> | ||
| - | |1 (Data Input) | < | ||
| - | |2 (RPT CTRL) | ||
| - | |3 (MIC) | < | ||
| - | |4 (MIC GND) | < | ||
| - | |5 (PTT) | < | ||
| - | |6 (GND) | < | ||
| - | |7 (+8VDC OUT) | < | ||
| - | |8 (AF OUT) | ||
| - | </ | ||
| - | * The second step is to set the menu option 43: '' | ||
| - | * For my setup: | ||
| - | * I set the UHF radio to low power because it's either going to be used on a UHF simplex frequency when I'm around the house, or by VE7SCK, which is also really close. | ||
| - | * I set the VHF radio to high power because this radio would need to reach a repeater further away. It will also only transmit when I'm speaking on the UHF simplex frequency or when someone is using VE7SCK, which is less often. | ||
| - | * Once both radios are on their correct frequencies (one must be on UHF and the other on VHF), connect the cable to link them both. | ||
howto/xband.1633661717.txt.gz · Last modified: by va7fi
