[aprssig] TM-271A manual;
Stephen H. Smith
wa8lmf2 at aol.com
Thu Mar 10 16:50:36 EST 2005
scott at opentrac.org wrote:
>>Look for "Kenwwood TM271 Manual.PDF" . As usual, left-clicking the link
>>will try to open the PDF in your browser, while RIGHT-clicking will
>>offer to "Save Target As... " which is usually what one wants. It's a
>>1.25MB file download.
>>
>>
>
>Thanks. I tried getting it off their site at home and at work, and both
>places got a 0-byte file.
>
>
>
>>I would assume the hole in the case, and the pads on the PC board would
>>still be there for the din plug. Perhaps one could thread a pigtail made
>>
>>
>
>If so, I'll know soon enough. I know a local Kenwood dealer... I'll see if
>I can get a part number for the connector if it's not something with an
>obvious equivalent I can get form Digi-Key. If the pads and everything are
>there, I'll document the procedure and post pictures of the process.
>
>Scott
>N1VG
>
>
>
Based on my previous experience with this sort of stuff, you'll have to
acquire a service manual for the TM271; i.e. $25-$30 additional
purchase. Normally Kenwood's service manuals document all national
destination variations of a model , though the coding schemes they use
are sometimes confusing and ambigious.
Usually there will be more than one set of schematics and board
X-rays that will show different parts added, missing, or changed
depending on destination.
For example, UHF rigs almost always have a gridded table showing
different value inductors and/or caps depending on whether the radio is
destined for Europe (430-440 MHz coverage) or North America (440-450).
2M models sometimes show a different set of L and C values for US vs
Euro for the same tuned circuits in RF stages, to acheive a lower-Q
broader tuned circuit. (The Euro 2m band is only 144-146 vs our 144-148. )
Note that in some cases, you will see THREE variations: The Euro
version (144-146 only with 1750 tone burst capability only), the US
version (144-148 with PL encode/decode, touchtone support, and crossband
repeat in the case of dual-banders) and a third version for Japan and
Australia (144-146 coverage only, but US-style features like touch tone
and PL.)
Usually the region frequency coverage can be changed by adding or
removing nasty little surface-mount diodes or resistors and then
resetting the CPU. ( http://mods.dk is the prime source of info on
these "hacks". )
Stephen H. Smith wa8lmf (at) aol.com
Home Page: http://wa8lmf.com
New/Updated "Rev G" APRS http://webs.lanset.com/wa8lmf/aprs
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