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#1
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I'm sick of these Frs radios. I want a high power radio that I can take
hiking. Give me a clue please. Maybe one that uses repeaters but I am open to anything. |
#2
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Hey,
Get yourself one of those there GMRS radios. You'll need a license, and a repeater close by. blah blah blah "Fastau B" wrote in message . .. I'm sick of these Frs radios. I want a high power radio that I can take hiking. Give me a clue please. Maybe one that uses repeaters but I am open to anything. |
#3
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What about GMRS??? Anyone ever heard of those?
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#4
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"Fastau B" wrote in message
. .. What about GMRS??? Anyone ever heard of those? That's what we were just talking about. If your news feed is not showing you the posts on them try looking at the group on Google. The GMRS are available in models that start at 1watt, and go to as high as 5 watts that I have seen. The Midland ones that I use at work are 5 watt. They claim 14 mile range, but that's not going to happen in the real world. They do work one hell of a lot better than the FRS and the older 1 watt GMRS I used to use at work. We use them in and out of buildings. With the 5 watt there is never a problem no matter where we are. The run about $60.00 a pair for the ones that take AA batteries. Should give you some pretty good range in the woods. I have found they also work great when traveling to keep in touch with multiple vehicles. -- "Everything in excess! To enjoy the flavor of life, take big bites. Moderation is for monks." [Lazarus Long] |
#5
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On Thu, 30 Mar 2006 09:28:23 -0800, "Alex Clayton"
wrote: The run about $60.00 a pair for the ones that take AA batteries. 5 watts out of a pair of AA cells - probably closer to 10 watts drain on the batteries to get the 5 watts transmit - would limit you to about 3 or 4 hours of use, so you'd better carry spare batteries. And in the woods at 450 MHz (most people hike when there are leaves on the trees, not snow on the ground), the range is even more limited without a repeater nearby. Over the other side of a decent hill without a repeater? If it works buy lottery tickets - they'll win. |
#6
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"Al Klein" wrote in message
... On Thu, 30 Mar 2006 09:28:23 -0800, "Alex Clayton" wrote: The run about $60.00 a pair for the ones that take AA batteries. 5 watts out of a pair of AA cells - probably closer to 10 watts drain on the batteries to get the 5 watts transmit - would limit you to about 3 or 4 hours of use, so you'd better carry spare batteries. And in the woods at 450 MHz (most people hike when there are leaves on the trees, not snow on the ground), the range is even more limited without a repeater nearby. Over the other side of a decent hill without a repeater? If it works buy lottery tickets - they'll win. Well either Midland lies about them, or no one told the radios then. I use them for 2 12 hour shifts on a set of AA rechargeable, and have never had them die in the middle of a shift. Of course we are not talking for 12 hours to each other. If they were in constant use as in we had nothing better to do than chat all night, I suppose I would have to recharge them a couple times a shift. We tried them tonight at 5 miles, with me in one building, and the other guy in another building 5 miles apart and we could talk fine. Don't know if the leaves are harder on the transmition than the walls, don't really care as I am not out in the woods with these. I know little about radios, but from reading this group for years I do get one hell of a laugh out of all the experts though. One says one thing, then someone else with a degree clams that's completely wrong and on and on it goes. The threads about antenna's often have me laughing good. I know with the old set of these I had, when we were in Mt. Rainer Nation Park talking from car to car, when we could not see the other cars because they were on the other side of woods, those worked great. They claimed 4 watts of power. Now I'm sure some experts here will tell everyone that they can't do that and even have slide rule equations to prove it can't work. For me, I will not tell the radios, as they do not know, so they just work. shrug -- "Everything in excess! To enjoy the flavor of life, take big bites. Moderation is for monks." [Lazarus Long] |
#7
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If you go with GMRS radios, and plan to use them with a repeater, make sure
the radios support that function. It requires you to transmit on one frequency, and receive on another. Many repeaters also require CTCSS, or possibly DCS capability as well. Most of the "bubble pack" radios do not work with repeaters. Look for deals on used Motorola, Kenwood, etc. Bill Crocker "Fastau B" wrote in message . .. I'm sick of these Frs radios. I want a high power radio that I can take hiking. Give me a clue please. Maybe one that uses repeaters but I am open to anything. |
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