[aprssig] [These] Mobile Digipeating
Gregg Wonderly
gregg at wonderly.org
Tue Sep 20 10:29:42 EDT 2011
A digipeater consumes the transmission, alters it, and sends it back out. It is
a "Message forwarding system."
as detailed in part 97.219.
Gregg Wonderly
On 9/20/2011 8:05 AM, Dr. John wrote:
> Lynn,
> Repeating is repeating either simples or duel.
> The FCC, stated clearly states this.
> The only unit's that are repeaters and in mobile mode are as example mini
> repeaters in police cars, like the state police used when they enter a
> facility and in remote areas.
> Thesesunits were made by Midland and some other companies. But they were
> registered.
> John W3ATE-8
>
> *From:* David Nichols <mailto:dnchls at gmail.com>
> *Sent:* Monday, September 19, 2011 10:32 PM
> *To:* 'TAPR APRS Mailing List' <mailto:aprssig at tapr.org>
> *Subject:* Re: [aprssig] Mobile Digipeating
>
> All of this brings up another issue. From the little I've been able to gather
> about mobile digipeating, and I agree with the statement below ( I believe
> temporary re-locatable is a better term), it is for temporary emergency use.
> If this is correct, what constitutes "emergency". Could I justify using it as
> described for practice purposes? I practice, on the average, twice a week, for
> 1-2 hours. I would hate for my next posting to you folks to be from
> Leavenworth after my first digipeating session J. Or for that matter, would I
> be getting nasty-grams from the APRS community? Otherwise, I think this might
> fit my needs. I could also use it on actual searches, especially if I drive a
> ways from Incident Base to the subject's place last seen, which has been the
> case several times.
>
> dave
>
> N5FMA
>
> *From:*aprssig-bounces at tapr.org [mailto:aprssig-bounces at tapr.org] *On Behalf
> Of *Jim Alles
> *Sent:* Saturday, September 17, 2011 9:52 AM
> *To:* TAPR APRS Mailing List
> *Subject:* Re: [aprssig] Mobile Digipeating
>
> Besides, we really aren't talking about mobile digipeating. That is not
> recommended for APRS, either.
>
> I would call it a re-locatable digipeater, others might use the term
> portable. It is temporary, fixed use.
>
> Peace,
>
> Jim A. KB3TBX
>
> On Sat, Sep 17, 2011 at 8:53 AM, Lynn W. Deffenbaugh (Mr)
> <ldeffenb at homeside.to <mailto:ldeffenb at homeside.to>> wrote:
>
> A digipeater is not a dual-frequency repeater, but a receive and re-transmit
> on a single frequency. There is no pre-registration required in the United
> States that I'm aware of.
>
> Lynn (D) - KJ4ERJ - Author of APRSISCE for Windows Mobile and Win32
>
>
>
> On 9/17/2011 8:32 AM, Dr. John wrote:
>
> Mobile repeaters in the amateur environment is not authorized. As repeaters
> need to be registered at a fixed position
>
> Dr. John Gregory /W3ATE-8
>
> --------------------------------------------------
> From: "Tom Russo" <russo at bogodyn.org <mailto:russo at bogodyn.org>>
> Sent: Saturday, September 17, 2011 1:02 AM
> To: "TAPR APRS Mailing List" <aprssig at tapr.org <mailto:aprssig at tapr.org>>
> Subject: Re: [aprssig] Mobile Digipeating
>
> On Fri, Sep 16, 2011 at 10:34:30PM -0600, we recorded a bogon-computron
> collision of the <dnchls at gmail.com <mailto:dnchls at gmail.com>> flavor, containing:
>
> I am in search and rescue and use APRS so others can keep track of me.
>
>
> You're in good company.
>
> I
> live in New Mexico where we have many digipeaters on mountain tops, but we
> still have many dead zones.
>
>
> I've been watching your tracks. I'm not sure the dead zones are as dead as
> all that. Still, there are some notable places where there are searches and
> that have spots where you can't be heard.
>
> I have a YAESU VX-8DR ht that I carry with me
> both when practicing and on actual searches. I am considering buying a
> Kenwood TM-D710A. I would like to use the 710 in my mobile as a digipeater
> to either get back to search base on a search or to a mountain digi when I'm
> practicing so my family can know where I'm at on APRS.fi. I would typically
> be within a couple of miles from my truck when I transmitted an APRS signal
> from my ht. How much power does the 710 transmit when in digipeater mode?
>
>
> It transmits with the same power that you have set for its own APRS
> transmissions.
>
> Would this be a situation where using a mobile would be useful? Presently,
> it just doesn't seem I have the punch I need when using the ht.
>
>
> It would help if your truck is generally within range of your handheld, the
> truck is in a good place where it is getting digipeated, and you don't have
> terrain in between you and the truck that prevents the truck from hearing you.
>
> In this case you could use your truck's callsign as the first hop in your
> digi path, and WIDE2-2 next in the path. That'd let your truck beacon you
> with more ooomph.
>
> The downside of this is that if you wind up in a spot where your truck's
> radio can't hear you, you won't get anywhere even if a WIDE can hear you,
> because they won't premptively digipeat before your truck.
>
> It's unfortunate that Yaesu chose not to implement "Proportional Pathing" in the
> VX-8*R series radios. The VX-8R lets you set 8 paths, but rather than
> cycling through them, it simply concatenates them for every transmission. I'm
> unfamiliar with the VX-8DR, maybe it does have proportional pathing. With
> proportional pathing, you can set multiple digi paths, but rather than using
> them all at once, it cycles through them for each transmission. Then you
> could have "TRUCK,WIDE2-2" for every third transmission,
> "WIDE1-1,WIDE2-2" for every third transmission, and "WIDE2-2" for every third.
> That would take care of making sure that at least SOME of your packets get
> to a wide digi --- either directly, or through your truck, or through a fill-in.
>
> Unfortunately, the people I know both in SAR and amateur radio have never
> played with mobile digipeaters and are pretty clueless on the matter.
>
>
> Clueless? I don't think that's a fair statement.
>
> To date, most SAR activities in the state have managed without pressing need
> for mobile digis. NM SAR Support's comms trailer does have a TNC programmed
> to digi WIDE1-1, so if your path is WIDE1-1, WIDE2-2 (which is OK in NM for
> low-powered stations and ONLY low-powered stations... there was a big
> discussion on that subject recently, and you should check the archives
> about it, I won't open that can of worms again), then the comms trailer in
> base will serve as a fill-in digi if needed. We also have a portable digi we
> can place in the search area when necessary. It is rarely necessary, but it
> does get deployed now and then.
>
> You should also set your D710 to do TEMPn-N digipeating, but I'm sure
> Bob B. will pipe in here quickly about that one. Right now, very few people
> in the SAR community have their radios set up for it, so counting on the
> availability of TEMPn-N on searches is not a safe bet just yet. But if you
> set your own truck to do TEMPn-N, then when you know you aren't reaching
> a wide with your handheld on a search, and you know you can hear your truck,
> you can tinker with your path to use TEMPn-N for a while to be sure of getting
> out. You'd use "TEMP1-1,WIDE2-2" in that case, and as long as your truck
> can hear you you're good.
>
> One thing you should NOT do is set your truck to digipeat WIDEn-N as if it
> were permanent infrastructure. Some folks in NMSAR did do that for a while
> and it was a terrible mistake --- it meant that ALL traffic heard by the
> incident comms trailer was getting digipeated if it had any wide hops left.
> That meant the APRS radio in the trailer was transmitting all the time, and
> desensing lots of nearby voice radios every few seconds.
>
> --
> Tom Russo KM5VY SAR502 DM64ux http://www.swcp.com/~russo/
> <http://www.swcp.com/%7Erusso/>
> Tijeras, NM QRPL#1592 K2#398 SOC#236 http://kevan.org/brain.cgi?DDTNM
> "One man alone can be pretty dumb sometimes, but for real bona fide
> stupidity, there ain't nothin' can beat teamwork." - Edward Abbey
>
>
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