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#1
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![]() Again, I'm not sure how well these questions match up to the group here... The claimed range of these radios (FRS) is on the order of 2 miles. The manufs mention terrain and weather as limitations. How do they do in a wooded (flat) environment? How do they do in a suburban (moderately large houses, otherwise flat) environment? How do they do in the city? Are they multipath prone? What weather conditions are worse? I assume heavy rain, but does fog affect them? Will lightning a few miles away interfere with them severely? Thanks again, Cheers, Alan. -- --e-meil: there's no such thing as a FreeLunch.-- |
#2
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The claimed range of these radios (FRS) is on the order of 2 miles. The
manufs mention terrain and weather as limitations. How do they do in a wooded (flat) environment? Heh....I LOVE those claims! Two miles...in a vacuum and direct LOS (line of sight)....yup. Normal terrain? 1/2 mile to 1 mile for the typical FRS units. The GMRS units will do better, as they're higher power out....but the licence is $75 in the US...not sure what the deal is in Canada. MURS (if legal in Ca.) is another good choice....if you can find the units. FRS units are ubiquitious....MURS less so. The difference is frequency...MURS is in the 155 mhz range, FRS is in the 462 mhz range. MURS also has no licence requirements here, IIRC. They do well LOS and better than FRS (in my opinion) non-LOS. I picked up a set of cheapie RatShak MURS mobiles and have had as much as 10 mi. between them with decent reception. (external antenni) Don't know how MURS is handled in Canada, do check with the local authorities. Cheers; A |
#3
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The claimed range of these radios (FRS) is on the order of 2 miles. The
manufs mention terrain and weather as limitations. How do they do in a wooded (flat) environment? Heh....I LOVE those claims! Two miles...in a vacuum and direct LOS (line of sight)....yup. Normal terrain? 1/2 mile to 1 mile for the typical FRS units. The GMRS units will do better, as they're higher power out....but the licence is $75 in the US...not sure what the deal is in Canada. MURS (if legal in Ca.) is another good choice....if you can find the units. FRS units are ubiquitious....MURS less so. The difference is frequency...MURS is in the 155 mhz range, FRS is in the 462 mhz range. MURS also has no licence requirements here, IIRC. They do well LOS and better than FRS (in my opinion) non-LOS. I picked up a set of cheapie RatShak MURS mobiles and have had as much as 10 mi. between them with decent reception. (external antenni) Don't know how MURS is handled in Canada, do check with the local authorities. Cheers; A |
#4
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#6
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AA wrote:
The claimed range of these radios (FRS) is on the order of 2 miles. The manufs mention terrain and weather as limitations. How do they do in a wooded (flat) environment? Heh....I LOVE those claims! Two miles...in a vacuum and direct LOS (line of sight)....yup. Normal terrain? 1/2 mile to 1 mile for the typical FRS units. The GMRS units will do better, as they're higher power out....but the licence is $75 in the US...not sure what the deal is in Canada. MURS (if legal in Ca.) is another good choice....if you can find the units. FRS units are ubiquitious....MURS less so. The difference is frequency...MURS is in the 155 mhz range, FRS is in the 462 mhz range. MURS also has no licence requirements here, IIRC. They do well LOS and better than FRS (in my opinion) non-LOS. I picked up a set of cheapie RatShak MURS mobiles and have had as much as 10 mi. between them with decent reception. (external antenni) Don't know how MURS is handled in Canada, do check with the local authorities. Cheers; A Thanks, I've never heard of MURS. I'll look into it. If I read the tea leaves correctly, GMRS will be usable w/o a licence in Canada by the fall. Might be worth waiting until then. Cheers, Alan -- --e-meil: there's no such thing as a FreeLunch.-- |
#7
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AA wrote:
The claimed range of these radios (FRS) is on the order of 2 miles. The manufs mention terrain and weather as limitations. How do they do in a wooded (flat) environment? Heh....I LOVE those claims! Two miles...in a vacuum and direct LOS (line of sight)....yup. Normal terrain? 1/2 mile to 1 mile for the typical FRS units. The GMRS units will do better, as they're higher power out....but the licence is $75 in the US...not sure what the deal is in Canada. MURS (if legal in Ca.) is another good choice....if you can find the units. FRS units are ubiquitious....MURS less so. The difference is frequency...MURS is in the 155 mhz range, FRS is in the 462 mhz range. MURS also has no licence requirements here, IIRC. They do well LOS and better than FRS (in my opinion) non-LOS. I picked up a set of cheapie RatShak MURS mobiles and have had as much as 10 mi. between them with decent reception. (external antenni) Don't know how MURS is handled in Canada, do check with the local authorities. Cheers; A Thanks, I've never heard of MURS. I'll look into it. If I read the tea leaves correctly, GMRS will be usable w/o a licence in Canada by the fall. Might be worth waiting until then. Cheers, Alan -- --e-meil: there's no such thing as a FreeLunch.-- |
#8
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Alan Browne ) writes:
AA wrote: The claimed range of these radios (FRS) is on the order of 2 miles. The manufs mention terrain and weather as limitations. How do they do in a wooded (flat) environment? Heh....I LOVE those claims! Two miles...in a vacuum and direct LOS (line of sight)....yup. Normal terrain? 1/2 mile to 1 mile for the typical FRS units. The GMRS units will do better, as they're higher power out....but the licence is $75 in the US...not sure what the deal is in Canada. MURS (if legal in Ca.) is another good choice....if you can find the units. FRS units are ubiquitious....MURS less so. The difference is frequency...MURS is in the 155 mhz range, FRS is in the 462 mhz range. MURS also has no licence requirements here, IIRC. They do well LOS and better than FRS (in my opinion) non-LOS. I picked up a set of cheapie RatShak MURS mobiles and have had as much as 10 mi. between them with decent reception. (external antenni) Don't know how MURS is handled in Canada, do check with the local authorities. Cheers; A Thanks, I've never heard of MURS. I'll look into it. If I read the tea leaves correctly, GMRS will be usable w/o a licence in Canada by the fall. Might be worth waiting until then. Cheers, Alan But what tea leaves are you reading? This sort of radio news is not the sort of thing we'd hear about in the newspaper or on the local news. It might hit as such things become legal, but I can't see much word about any impending rule change being visible before the fact. And after that, one has to judge the source of information. Tea leaves aren't a good source. Even some guy saying somewhere that the rules might change isn't a definitive source. Now, if you actually go to the pertinent government site, then yes indeed there does seem to be forthcoming rule changes to allow "GMRS" in Canada. But that's not "tea leaves" or interpretation, it's an outright statement. If you do a search on "GMRS canada" one site you hit is the Radio Amateurs of Canada website, http://www.rac.ca They happen to have a page about FRS in Canada, http://www.rac.ca/frs Now that page mentions GMRS and MURS, but states they are not legal in Canada. But there's a link to the Industries Canada website, http://strategis.ic.gc.ca and if you go there and use "GMRS" for a search, you get this page: http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/epic/inter.../sf08144e.html which is a policy paper on the government's intention to allow GMRS. I've only looked at the synopsis, the whole paper is in pdf, but note that at the very least, there will be a changeover period because others are using that frequency range at the moment. The Gazette notice about this, from March, suggesting it could come as early as September 2004: http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/epic/inter.../sf08145e.html So one does not tea leaves, which also have a tendency to be wrong anyway. Michael VE2BVW |
#9
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Alan Browne ) writes:
AA wrote: The claimed range of these radios (FRS) is on the order of 2 miles. The manufs mention terrain and weather as limitations. How do they do in a wooded (flat) environment? Heh....I LOVE those claims! Two miles...in a vacuum and direct LOS (line of sight)....yup. Normal terrain? 1/2 mile to 1 mile for the typical FRS units. The GMRS units will do better, as they're higher power out....but the licence is $75 in the US...not sure what the deal is in Canada. MURS (if legal in Ca.) is another good choice....if you can find the units. FRS units are ubiquitious....MURS less so. The difference is frequency...MURS is in the 155 mhz range, FRS is in the 462 mhz range. MURS also has no licence requirements here, IIRC. They do well LOS and better than FRS (in my opinion) non-LOS. I picked up a set of cheapie RatShak MURS mobiles and have had as much as 10 mi. between them with decent reception. (external antenni) Don't know how MURS is handled in Canada, do check with the local authorities. Cheers; A Thanks, I've never heard of MURS. I'll look into it. If I read the tea leaves correctly, GMRS will be usable w/o a licence in Canada by the fall. Might be worth waiting until then. Cheers, Alan But what tea leaves are you reading? This sort of radio news is not the sort of thing we'd hear about in the newspaper or on the local news. It might hit as such things become legal, but I can't see much word about any impending rule change being visible before the fact. And after that, one has to judge the source of information. Tea leaves aren't a good source. Even some guy saying somewhere that the rules might change isn't a definitive source. Now, if you actually go to the pertinent government site, then yes indeed there does seem to be forthcoming rule changes to allow "GMRS" in Canada. But that's not "tea leaves" or interpretation, it's an outright statement. If you do a search on "GMRS canada" one site you hit is the Radio Amateurs of Canada website, http://www.rac.ca They happen to have a page about FRS in Canada, http://www.rac.ca/frs Now that page mentions GMRS and MURS, but states they are not legal in Canada. But there's a link to the Industries Canada website, http://strategis.ic.gc.ca and if you go there and use "GMRS" for a search, you get this page: http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/epic/inter.../sf08144e.html which is a policy paper on the government's intention to allow GMRS. I've only looked at the synopsis, the whole paper is in pdf, but note that at the very least, there will be a changeover period because others are using that frequency range at the moment. The Gazette notice about this, from March, suggesting it could come as early as September 2004: http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/epic/inter.../sf08145e.html So one does not tea leaves, which also have a tendency to be wrong anyway. Michael VE2BVW |
#10
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On Thu, 06 May 2004 09:03:32 GMT, Gary S hath writ:
On 04 May 2004 20:44:57 GMT, (AA) wrote: The claimed range of these radios (FRS) is on the order of 2 miles. Heh....I LOVE those claims! Two miles...in a vacuum and direct LOS (line of sight)....yup. Normal terrain? 1/2 mile to 1 mile for the typical FRS units. Yes. Saying the range is UP TO 2 miles is like saying a lottery ticket will win UP TO $1 million dollars. I just bought a Panasonic NiMH charger that came with 6 AA's and 2 AAA's. The AA's are marked "2100mAh" and the AAA's are marked "750mAh". In teeny, tiny print -- in front of the claims for the mAh -- it says "Up to". So, when they die and are completley useless, they'll still meet Panasonic spec's.... Oh, well. I bought the package for the charger anyway: 100-240 VAC, 50-60 cps, with "fold-in" mains prongs. Just the ticket for travel. $20 at Costco. 73 Jonesy -- | Marvin L Jones | jonz | W3DHJ | OS/2 | Gunnison, Colorado | @ | Jonesy | linux __ | 7,703' -- 2,345m | config.com | DM68mn SK |
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