[aprssig] European 1750 question?
Pentti Gronlund
pentti.gronlund at tut.fi
Fri Jun 18 11:37:42 EDT 2010
Robert Bruninga writes:
> In Europe (or anywhere else that whistle-up repeaters are
> used)...
Company-radio makers like Motorola call it single-tone access...
> Are ALL of these 1750 repeaters now narrowband? (meaning 2.5
> KHz deviation or whatever is the European standard?).
Narrowband is quite rare. I believe it has been made compulsory
in the UK and in Germany, everywhere else there can be narrowband
machines but the default is wideband (3.5 kHz nominal/5.0 kHz peak).
> Reason I ask, is that the APRS Freq Spec normally adds Txxx or
> Dxxx or 1750 in a four byte field to indicate the type of
> squelch. But it also uses the FIRST letter to indicate wide or
> narrow band operation. SO in the USA, we use Txxx or Dxxx. But
> in narrowband countries they would be txxx or dxxx. But what
> about 1750?
>
> Can we say that it now ALWAYS implies narrowband?
Nope.
Benjamin OH3BK
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