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#1
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I'm surprised giganews hasn't killed my subscription yet!
I'm still alive! I'm not even going to bother to catch up on the BS... |
#2
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This message has a working email, if you can unmunge it!
Scott wrote: I'm surprised giganews hasn't killed my subscription yet! I'm still alive! I'm not even going to bother to catch up on the BS... |
#3
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On Wed, 02 Mar 2005 12:32:13 -0500, Scott !t wrote:
I'm surprised giganews hasn't killed my subscription yet! I'm still alive! I'm not even going to bother to catch up on the BS... Still playing with MURS? Dave "Sandbagger" |
#4
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Still playing with MURS?
Want to buy a 19-1210? I've got a few IC-2100's. Blows the doors off the 19-1210 for receive. Low power is 5 watts. Not enough to make the g-man mad! No one on the lower 3, and the last 2 are used by local businesses. I leave them be. No action here on MURS. Most of the CB'ers have gone ham, and the last few CB'ers have asked where everybody went. I tell them to scan from 144 to 148 hooked up to their CB antenna. They need the height to hear simplex and distant repeaters. 5 watts will hit repeaters 50+ miles away from the mobile. 10 watts makes for a solid copy. 55 watts and a portable 3 element beam, well that can win VHF contests in the mobile category! It only took 2 months to realize the VHF FM travels farther locally then 11 meters does. I can talk places simplex that 11 can't do! Go figure... |
#5
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On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 02:08:46 -0500, Scott
wrote: Still playing with MURS? Want to buy a 19-1210? I've got a few IC-2100's. Blows the doors off the 19-1210 for receive. Low power is 5 watts. Not enough to make the g-man mad! No one on the lower 3, and the last 2 are used by local businesses. I leave them be. No action here on MURS. I've found pretty much the same thing. The upper 2 freqs are still in use by old business users. The lower three are dead. I had hoped for a old time "CB-like" atmosphere up there, but so far, there's not much interest. Most of the CB'ers have gone ham, and the last few CB'ers have asked where everybody went. I tell them to scan from 144 to 148 hooked up to their CB antenna. They need the height to hear simplex and distant repeaters. 5 watts will hit repeaters 50+ miles away from the mobile. 10 watts makes for a solid copy. 55 watts and a portable 3 element beam, well that can win VHF contests in the mobile category! It only took 2 months to realize the VHF FM travels farther locally then 11 meters does. I can talk places simplex that 11 can't do! That's amazing isn't it? I found out the same thing when I first started playing with 2 meters 20-some years ago. Point-point communications range from base stations (especially with multi-element beams), is much better (watt for watt) than what I used to get on CB. A 2 watt HT can hit repeaters 10 or 20 miles away. However, mobile to mobile, or base to mobile simplex is a bit more dicey on 2 meters. There's a lot more multipath flutter (If, like me, you live near a bunch of hills), and 11 meters usually works better for that. It all comes down to terrain. Have you tried SSB on 2M yet? That's even more fun, especially in the summer when there are tropo ducts practically every day. It's not uncommon to work most of the east coast with 300 watts and a set of 13 element beams. Dave "Sandbagger" http://home.ptd.net/~n3cvj Go figure... |
#6
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It only took 2 months to realize the VHF FM travels farther locally
then 11 meters does. I can talk places simplex that 11 can't do! That's amazing isn't it? I found out the same thing when I first started playing with 2 meters 20-some years ago. Point-point communications range from base stations (especially with multi-element beams), is much better (watt for watt) than what I used to get on CB. A 2 watt HT can hit repeaters 10 or 20 miles away. However, mobile to mobile, or base to mobile simplex is a bit more dicey on 2 meters. There's a lot more multipath flutter (If, like me, you live near a bunch of hills), and 11 meters usually works better for that. It all comes down to terrain. I've tried both 11 and 2. It all depends on location and circumstance. Have you tried SSB on 2M yet? That's even more fun, especially in the summer when there are tropo ducts practically every day. It's not uncommon to work most of the east coast with 300 watts and a set of 13 element beams. I've done 192 miles on VHF-FM simplex. I have the QSL card to prove it! I did it with 50 watts and 3 elements at 18 feet. That was my July 4th present from the Main Mama. |
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