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rickman wrote:
I take it you have not read the full thread, that's ok. Cell phones only work within range of a tower. The bay is miles wide and many areas where we paddle have little or no cell phone coverage. Lake Anna is the same. I have needed to use my cell phone while paddling only to find it can't dial a number. Why are you so belligerent? Yes, I have read the entire thread, and I am aware of the size of the bay. GSM cell phone coverage is limited by timing to 35km, about 5-10 times the range of a VHF handheld. If an 850 mHz GSM phone is not going to work where you are then a handheld won't reach land either. We always carry cell phones because they are useful when they work, but we never rely one them. In fact, we never rely on any one safety mechanism working. We always have a backup or two. That's why the radio is useful. It can work when the cell phones don't and it can do things a cell phone can't, like reach someone close by without knowing their phone number. But that was not the point of this whole ****ing contest. It was based upon your mistaken understanding that you could put a 25 watt boat radio in your truck ON LAND and reach kayaks in the water. The laws of physics being what they are, yes you could probably go fairly far with a 25 watt radio, a good antenna and height and with a receive preamp and a beam antenna be able to hear across the entire bay and possibly be heard. Since that is not an option, you are stuck with a handheld radio and a rubber ducky, which will get you a couple of miles on a good day if you are on land, and more if you are on water. Come to think of it the best suggestion was to have someone build a decent listening post on high ground (or with a tower) and relay information to someone via cell phone on the water. The are AFAIK no restrictions on land based fixed receivers and you could take old Motorola Maxtracs (available for almost nothing these days), connect them up to 3 element beam antennas, add a cheap receive preamplifier and hear everything on the bay if you had enough receivers with their antennas spread in an overlapping pattern. Geoff. -- Geoffrey S. Mendelson, N3OWJ/4X1GM/KBUH7245/KBUW5379 |
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