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Sorry, Doc. Frank's reply is exactly correct. As long as the two radio
horizons touch or intersect, communications will be established (assuming, of course, that the receivers work properly, the transmitters work properly, and the antennas work properly). My former neighbor now lives in Wellsville, some 80 miles away (110 or so by car) and can hear me just fine on the local repeater. Her elevation is around 2200 feet, which translates to a radio horizon of roughly 66 miles. One has to add the radio range of the repeater (which, incidentally, is located in the *opposite* direction from her) - the elevation is something like 500 feet (31 miles to radio horizon). 73 from Rochester, NY Jim "'Doc" wrote in message ... Jim, In your example about range, the range wouldn't be 6 miles, it would 3 miles. The radius of the coverage area has to overlap the transmitter/receiver. So, if two radios each have a range of 3 miles that does not mean the total range between radios is 6 miles. 'Doc --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.502 / Virus Database: 300 - Release Date: 7/18/03 |
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