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Difference between revisions of "Amateur Radio Gear"

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(New page: Welcome to the RR ham gear article. This article indexes other articles detailing specs on various 2 meter and/or dual band (2m/440) radios used by amateur radio enthusiasts (hams). Some ...)
 
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Welcome to the RR ham gear article. This article indexes other articles detailing specs on various 2 meter and/or dual band (2m/440) radios used by amateur radio enthusiasts (hams).
 
Welcome to the RR ham gear article. This article indexes other articles detailing specs on various 2 meter and/or dual band (2m/440) radios used by amateur radio enthusiasts (hams).
  
Some of these radios have receive coverage outside the transmit limits; they can potentially be used as a backup conventional scanner, if the coverage extends to the public service bands in your area. In addition, some have a connector on the mic jack labeled ''9600 baud out'' or similar. While intended for feeding audio for high speed packet and other applications, this is usually a tap right from the discriminator. Other applications that require a [[Discriminator Output]] (such as [[UniTrunker]] ) can be fed directly from this point without needing additional internal modifications.
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Some of these radios have receive coverage outside the transmit limits; they can potentially be used as a backup conventional scanner, if the coverage extends to the public service bands in your area. In addition, some have a connector on the mic jack labeled ''9600 baud out'' or similar. While intended for feeding audio for high speed packet and other applications, this is usually a tap right from the discriminator. Other applications that require a [[Discriminator output]] (such as [[UniTrunker]] ) can be fed directly from this point without needing additional internal modifications.

Revision as of 16:49, 28 June 2007

Welcome to the RR ham gear article. This article indexes other articles detailing specs on various 2 meter and/or dual band (2m/440) radios used by amateur radio enthusiasts (hams).

Some of these radios have receive coverage outside the transmit limits; they can potentially be used as a backup conventional scanner, if the coverage extends to the public service bands in your area. In addition, some have a connector on the mic jack labeled 9600 baud out or similar. While intended for feeding audio for high speed packet and other applications, this is usually a tap right from the discriminator. Other applications that require a Discriminator output (such as UniTrunker ) can be fed directly from this point without needing additional internal modifications.

Subcategories

This category has the following 4 subcategories, out of 4 total.

Pages in category "Amateur Radio Gear"

The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.