Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Alan wrote:
"KØHB" writes: I travel a lot, to large cities like Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Louis, Tu cson, Kansas City, Indianapolis, Detroit, OKC, DFW, Tucson, Phoenix, Denver, El Paso/Las Cruces. It's the same everywhere. Just a scattering of sign als on the bands, but EVERY PAIR spoken for. True. 10 - 15 years ago, they were busy. Now --- silent. It seems that way everywhere. It's certainly that way in rural Minnesota. There are repeaters in many of the small towns, and they're alive in the sense of being technically there, but they're dead in the sense of anyone using them on a regular basis. Sometimes there's a regular group who gets together in the morning, but for our local repeater even that custom has faded away. We lost our UHF repeater almost a year ago when the elevator it was on was destroyed by lightning. [For you city slickers, the word "elevator" out here in the sticks is used to describe a large structure in which grain is stored.] That repeater is still silent. A new location was secured, and funding for it was provided by the local emergency management agency, but the antenna still hasn't been erected. So I have to wonder, in metro areas where all the slots are "full", how many of those repeaters actually exist and would respond if presented with a correctly-toned signal on their published input frequency. Perhaps more important, how many of them are used regularly? It might actually make more sense to shut down several repeaters that don't have a critical mass of users and move those small groups to the remaining repeaters so that there was actually someone there to talk to. Better to have two or three active repeaters in a metro area than a dozen dead ones. I don't know what took the interest away for everyone else. However, with nobody on to talk to, I am less interested in solving the problems in t he car to get on, so if others are in the same boat, we all contribute to the silence. It's a chicken and egg problem. I know that I'm contributing to the problem; my 2-meter equipment consists of an HT, and I've considered that I need to buy a "real" 2-meter rig and put up an antenna . . . but it's difficult for me to justify the time and expense to do so when there's no activity. 73, Steve KB9X |