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passive repeaters
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 The second thing I would think about passive in portable walkie talkies is quality. If my life depends on something and other people are depending on my life to continue, I tend to go with the best equipment I can get. Will the radio still work repeater if it gets wet in a storm or dropped into a fishpond or the ocean? How likely is it to break if it accidentally passive gets dropped on a pile of rocks on a mountain or a sidewalk in a city? What''s the guarantee cover? Remember: you want something you can depend on in times when you really need to communicate. Don''t be penny-wise and pound foolish. Don''t get a toy. Get what works and will work under stress. The advent of the Family Radio Service and GRMS has repeater and passive opened a whole new possibility for reliable short-range communications, and depending on your needs they may just fill the bill --or they repeater may not. Understand that ANY means of radio communication can save lives, exchange information and simply be fun, so that is endorsement enough. Most of these radios operate on frequencies just above the 70 cm Amateur Bands...somewhere around 462-467 Mhz. The major players all produce satisfactory equipment with similar standards so, for the price conscious, dollars can be saved if you know what to look for. First look at the specifications; the more watts of power out, the further your signal will travel. Beginners note that 700mw (milliwatts) is LESS than 1w (watt). More watts, more power, more distance. The manufacturer''s range claims are not fraudulent or specious, but they can be misleading unless you are in clear country, the ideal conditions for distance communications. Don''t expect a two mile range in heavy terrain, you won''t get it...sometimes you won''t passive get 200 yards. But for inner-mall talking with your kids and family members, most of them are ok. I''ve also used them on fly fishing trips repeater where we have seldom been more than a quarter mile from camp and they were fine. The passive physical casing of repeater the radio can be an issue depending on whether the radio passive is for the wife''s purse, or for us butch fishermen and hunters whose equipment is subject to jostling and knocking around. In the outback hunting, fishing and rockclimbing venues, don''t rule out Walkie-Talkies-- the units are usually less expensive and just as well made. In remote areas interference is highly unlikely, and the squelch can be set just high enough to allow only your immediate user groups participation in more populated repeater areas. passive The subjects repeater of intermodulation, transmit/receive audio, etc. can for the moment be set aside inasmuchas these questions passive are of little concern repeater to the casual hobbiest. The "rubber ducky" antenna that comes with these radios is the LEAST efficient antenna. But there are extensible "gain" antennas that can be had, even though they are a little bit clunky in active environments. If you are passive going repeater to be in difficult terrain, or say you want to transmit from car to car, 440 Mhz antennas are available from many sources, notably, and with a simple adaptor you can connect your FRS rig to a magnetic mount antenna on the roof of your vehicles. Welcome to the primier site for two way radios. Our company is the World's Leading Supplier for Professional Portable and Mobile Two-Way Radios & Walkies! We Buy, Sell, Trade, & Repair all types of new and used 2-way radio equipment for Virtually any and all types of work.
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