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Ranger Radio
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Ranger Radio
Nice radio, ran one for a couple of years. Still have it tucked away in it's
original box. Hasn't be opened. One of these days will have to fire it up. Good luck with the auction! "RadoMan" wrote in message m... Veiw He http://cgi.ebay.com/RANGER-Clear-Cha...cmd ZViewItem |
Ranger Radio
On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 02:18:06 GMT, "RadoMan"
wrote: Veiw He http://cgi.ebay.com/RANGER-Clear-Cha...cmd ZViewItem The picture is not a 100 watt model. |
Ranger Radio
I love Ranger! I had a few of the 2950/70 variations, and Ranger was
my favorite back before I discovered mainstream Ham gear. Hopefully, you're working toward getting that type of equipment! :-) I still have a soft spot for Ranger, and browse their catalog from time to time. Buther Boy On Tue, 27 Sep 2005 02:18:06 GMT, "RadoMan" wrote: Veiw He http://cgi.ebay.com/RANGER-Clear-Cha...cmd ZViewItem -- Remove the word Spam from my e-mail to contact me... http://www.PrivacySig.com/SIGbutherb...mail-black.png ~ |
Ranger Radio
"Buther Boy" wrote in message ... I love Ranger! I had a few of the 2950/70 variations, and Ranger was my favorite back before I discovered mainstream Ham gear. Hopefully, you're working toward getting that type of equipment! :-) I still have a soft spot for Ranger, and browse their catalog from time to time. Buther Boy I have a Ranger 2950 which goes from 26 to 32MHz. Its excellent in the fact that if theres not a lot of DX or local stations on i can scoot upto 31MHz and evesdrop on the cordless phones :o)..You cant do that on a cobra or Lincoln... well not without some severe adapting anyhows... a very underrated rig in my opinion as they never fetch as much as Lincolns on eBay but have a much better coverage. Graham |
Ranger Radio
On a sunny day (Sat, 1 Oct 2005 19:02:25 +0100) it happened "The Magnum"
wrote in : "Buther Boy" wrote in message .. . I love Ranger! I had a few of the 2950/70 variations, and Ranger was my favorite back before I discovered mainstream Ham gear. Hopefully, you're working toward getting that type of equipment! :-) I still have a soft spot for Ranger, and browse their catalog from time to time. Buther Boy I have a Ranger 2950 which goes from 26 to 32MHz. Its excellent in the fact that if theres not a lot of DX or local stations on i can scoot upto 31MHz and evesdrop on the cordless phones :o)..You cant do that on a cobra or Lincoln... well not without some severe adapting anyhows... a very underrated rig in my opinion as they never fetch as much as Lincolns on eBay but have a much better coverage. Graham I have a 2970, it has push pull output to 150W, for the rest freq range is the same as 2950, best one I ever had, lots of DX. Very stable too. The 2970 has a big heatsink on the bottom side. Have not seen people with one for sale here, all keepers :-) I like the push buttons. |
Ranger Radio
"Jan Panteltje" wrote in message news:1128191239.364ee6569fd8847eafdf20a36855278d@t eranews... On a sunny day (Sat, 1 Oct 2005 19:02:25 +0100) it happened "The Magnum" wrote in : "Buther Boy" wrote in message .. . I love Ranger! I had a few of the 2950/70 variations, and Ranger was my favorite back before I discovered mainstream Ham gear. Hopefully, you're working toward getting that type of equipment! :-) I still have a soft spot for Ranger, and browse their catalog from time to time. Buther Boy I have a Ranger 2950 which goes from 26 to 32MHz. Its excellent in the fact that if theres not a lot of DX or local stations on i can scoot upto 31MHz and evesdrop on the cordless phones :o)..You cant do that on a cobra or Lincoln... well not without some severe adapting anyhows... a very underrated rig in my opinion as they never fetch as much as Lincolns on eBay but have a much better coverage. Graham I have a 2970, it has push pull output to 150W, for the rest freq range is the same as 2950, best one I ever had, lots of DX. Very stable too. The 2970 has a big heatsink on the bottom side. Have not seen people with one for sale here, all keepers :-) I like the push buttons. Lol yea lots of things to push. I would like the 2970 next but would need to sell a few other things first. Are these variable wattage and what, if they are, do they start from? Id hate to upset the neighbours with TVI :o) |
Ranger Radio
On Sat, 01 Oct 2005 09:10:19 -0500, Buther Boy wrote:
I love Ranger! I had a few of the 2950/70 variations, and Ranger was my favorite back before I discovered mainstream Ham gear. Hopefully, you're working toward getting that type of equipment! :-) I still have a soft spot for Ranger, and browse their catalog from time to time. Those are not the same company. Ranger AR3500 was made by a totally different company. Vinnie S. |
Ranger Radio
On a sunny day (Sat, 1 Oct 2005 21:06:27 +0100) it happened "The Magnum"
wrote in : "Jan Panteltje" wrote in message news:1128191239.364ee6569fd8847eafdf20a36855278d@ teranews... On a sunny day (Sat, 1 Oct 2005 19:02:25 +0100) it happened "The Magnum" wrote in : "Buther Boy" wrote in message .. . I love Ranger! I had a few of the 2950/70 variations, and Ranger was my favorite back before I discovered mainstream Ham gear. Hopefully, you're working toward getting that type of equipment! :-) I still have a soft spot for Ranger, and browse their catalog from time to time. Buther Boy I have a Ranger 2950 which goes from 26 to 32MHz. Its excellent in the fact that if theres not a lot of DX or local stations on i can scoot upto 31MHz and evesdrop on the cordless phones :o)..You cant do that on a cobra or Lincoln... well not without some severe adapting anyhows... a very underrated rig in my opinion as they never fetch as much as Lincolns on eBay but have a much better coverage. Graham I have a 2970, it has push pull output to 150W, for the rest freq range is the same as 2950, best one I ever had, lots of DX. Very stable too. The 2970 has a big heatsink on the bottom side. Have not seen people with one for sale here, all keepers :-) I like the push buttons. Lol yea lots of things to push. I would like the 2970 next but would need to sell a few other things first. Are these variable wattage and what, if they are, do they start from? Id hate to upset the neighbours with TVI :o) Oh, it starts rather low, I'v measured lemme see: just measured 3.3 A at about 13V with RF output at minimum in FM. The set itself consumes about 400mA, so 2.9A = 13x2.9 = 37.7 W input to power amp, so maybe about half that (15 to 18W) to antenna? Add some SWR etc... But maybe some more it is a nice class B symmetrical amp. At full power in SSB it will peak 18A (says manual) but this meter only goes to 10A, so have not checked. Antenne wattmeter is kaput.. dunno what happend to it, dropped it or something. 18A at 13.6 = 244 W input for 150 out the effciency would be 61%. So if it is really 61% at lower loads too you'd have 16W minimum in FM. Seems I was close. |
Ranger Radio
On a sunny day (Sat, 1 Oct 2005 21:06:27 +0100) it happened "The Magnum"
wrote in : PS here is a good site, diagrams too: http://www.cbtricks.com/radios/rci/rci2970/index.htm some data on the chips is he http://members.tripod.com/~Malze |
Ranger Radio
On a sunny day (Sat, 1 Oct 2005 21:06:27 +0100) it happened "The Magnum"
wrote in : Lol yea lots of things to push. I would like the 2970 next but would need to sell a few other things first. Are these variable wattage and what, if they are, do they start from? Id hate to upset the neighbours with TVI :o) OK, I designed and build a new Watt meter today, thsi is the BIGGEST watt meter you can imagine, once got this thing from a lot of stuff that was to be thrown away. What I actually do is a peak detection of the RF output at the antenna, and then used the calculator and dummy load a lot... Calibrated with comparing with an other known set, diguital meter and scope, should be within 5% or so... Because this meter had a different scale I wrote the new values in it (it is so big hehe). Here is what I have measured: FM RF gain Watts minimum 2W button pointing left 10W button pointing up 27.5W button pointing right 30W maximum 35W AM is the same, is SSB with mike gain to max and blowing in the mike and RF gain to max: 144 or more watt (end meter scale). So, I think with 2W minimum on FM and AM you will be fine. |
Ranger Radio
"Jan Panteltje" wrote in message news:1128538994.da8d95c0a88d0f0a09cc6e1b05a108f6@t eranews... On a sunny day (Sat, 1 Oct 2005 21:06:27 +0100) it happened "The Magnum" wrote in : Lol yea lots of things to push. I would like the 2970 next but would need to sell a few other things first. Are these variable wattage and what, if they are, do they start from? Id hate to upset the neighbours with TVI :o) OK, I designed and build a new Watt meter today, thsi is the BIGGEST watt meter you can imagine, once got this thing from a lot of stuff that was to be thrown away. What I actually do is a peak detection of the RF output at the antenna, and then used the calculator and dummy load a lot... Calibrated with comparing with an other known set, diguital meter and scope, should be within 5% or so... Because this meter had a different scale I wrote the new values in it (it is so big hehe). Here is what I have measured: FM RF gain Watts minimum 2W button pointing left 10W button pointing up 27.5W button pointing right 30W maximum 35W AM is the same, is SSB with mike gain to max and blowing in the mike and RF gain to max: 144 or more watt (end meter scale). So, I think with 2W minimum on FM and AM you will be fine. Thanks for your detailed answer. Its nice to know people are still prepaired to take the time to help. I might buy one of these then if i can find one cheap enough (not too cheap as to be a duff one though) as im in no real rush being as i already have the 2950. Best regards, Graham |
Ranger Radio
"The Magnum" wrote in message ... "Jan Panteltje" wrote in message news:1128538994.da8d95c0a88d0f0a09cc6e1b05a108f6@t eranews... On a sunny day (Sat, 1 Oct 2005 21:06:27 +0100) it happened "The Magnum" wrote in : Lol yea lots of things to push. I would like the 2970 next but would need to sell a few other things first. Are these variable wattage and what, if they are, do they start from? Id hate to upset the neighbours with TVI :o) OK, I designed and build a new Watt meter today, thsi is the BIGGEST watt meter you can imagine, once got this thing from a lot of stuff that was to be thrown away. What I actually do is a peak detection of the RF output at the antenna, and then used the calculator and dummy load a lot... Calibrated with comparing with an other known set, diguital meter and scope, should be within 5% or so... Because this meter had a different scale I wrote the new values in it (it is so big hehe). Here is what I have measured: FM RF gain Watts minimum 2W button pointing left 10W button pointing up 27.5W button pointing right 30W maximum 35W AM is the same, is SSB with mike gain to max and blowing in the mike and RF gain to max: 144 or more watt (end meter scale). So, I think with 2W minimum on FM and AM you will be fine. Thanks for your detailed answer. Its nice to know people are still prepaired to take the time to help. I might buy one of these then if i can find one cheap enough (not too cheap as to be a duff one though) as im in no real rush being as i already have the 2950. Best regards, Graham I forgot to ask, do you think the 10-14A PSU i have will be strong enough to power this (when on full power) or should i think about getting a 20A one? |
Ranger Radio
On a sunny day (Thu, 6 Oct 2005 16:11:20 +0100) it happened "The Magnum"
wrote in : I forgot to ask, do you think the 10-14A PSU i have will be strong enough to power this (when on full power) or should i think about getting a 20A one? I have used an 8A computer AT supply, it works on that, used it with an ampere meter, kept the current below 8A... that is RF power knob a bit before middle position. Now it is on a 12V 12Ah gel battery, and charging from an AC adaptor I modified to make 13.56 volt (and it has current limit). So, the battery is always charging, but with about 1 A maximum. The battery is made by 'Enduring' (China). I have not run out of battery power yet.... In theory it give should less then an hour at full power, but in SSB you are on average much lower then that, only the peak current counts. Your 14A PSU will not be able to handle the SSB peak of 18A, at full RF power. Although my charger is only 1A, the battery will do 18 A peak no problem. These links are about SSB average power, quoting an average of about 14dB: http://www.ac6rm.net/mailarchive/htm.../msg01197.html http://www.ac6rm.net/mailarchive/htm.../msg00596.html So, maybe 1/8 the power on average, so 12/18 * 8 = 5.3 hours speech at 150W PEP in SSB on a battery charge... In FM much less time, given half the time speaking at 12A perhaps 2 hours... So, the gist is, you can get away in SSB with a small power supply and a good small battery. That will give you isolated hum free operation too, and you are still OK if power fails, say in case of flooding or some disaster. That is why I did it this way (and it was cheaper then a new 18A PSU too). It is your choice, you can always use reduced power. |
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