Programming Time
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- motofreak008
- Posts: 210
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 3:46 pm
Programming Time
I had two radios taken in to a radio shop to get programmed today. I took a Maxtrac 100 and a HT1250. I did not get them back today, they said they did not have enough time. They were taken in at 3:00 and the shop wanted to close at 4:00. How long does it really take to get two radios programmed?
I doubt your programming changes were a life-or-death situation, so the radios would enter their system and get done "in the order they were received" along with all the other items they got during the week.
If you walk into a barber shop and find 2 barbers and 12 people waiting, would you expect to be out in an hour, especially if they want to close early due to the holidays?
It could have taken only an hour, but you probably don't have any control over when that hour is available.
Bob M.
If you walk into a barber shop and find 2 barbers and 12 people waiting, would you expect to be out in an hour, especially if they want to close early due to the holidays?
It could have taken only an hour, but you probably don't have any control over when that hour is available.
Bob M.
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Our shop it would run about 2-days. We always do a full spec check and alignment on each radio so we allow 1/2 hr per radio.
Our techs are not sitting in the shop just waiting for you to walk in, they are working with a normal backlog. Now, if you phoned ahead, made arrangements and a time slot was alocated we could have them done in a morning, or an afternoon.
Our techs are not sitting in the shop just waiting for you to walk in, they are working with a normal backlog. Now, if you phoned ahead, made arrangements and a time slot was alocated we could have them done in a morning, or an afternoon.
- HLA
- Posts: 2334
- Joined: Mon Jul 11, 2005 8:15 pm
- What radios do you own?: HT1550's, X9000's, CDM1550's
if they already have the codeplugs and just have towrite it to the radios they can be done in 10 minutes. but if they have to type everything in manually it could take a couple hours just to do the 1250. just depends on how many channels they have to do?
HLA
I never check PM's so don't bother, just email me.
I won't reply to a hotmail, gmail, aol or any other generic free address, if you want me to reply use a real address.
STOP ASKING ME FOR SOFTWARE OR FIRMWARE, I JUST FORWARD ALL OF THE REQUESTS TO THE MODERATORS
I never check PM's so don't bother, just email me.
I won't reply to a hotmail, gmail, aol or any other generic free address, if you want me to reply use a real address.
STOP ASKING ME FOR SOFTWARE OR FIRMWARE, I JUST FORWARD ALL OF THE REQUESTS TO THE MODERATORS
Yep, typing that stuff in from a list and double checking to avoiding mistakes is tedious at best. You wouldn't enjoy doing it.
Chris,
Hamming 31 years
http://www.wa2zdy.com
Wesley Chapel, Pasco County, Florida
Snow? What's that?!
The human race is proof that Darwin was wrong.
Hamming 31 years
http://www.wa2zdy.com
Wesley Chapel, Pasco County, Florida
Snow? What's that?!
The human race is proof that Darwin was wrong.
- motofreak008
- Posts: 210
- Joined: Fri Aug 11, 2006 3:46 pm
- Pimpala03
- Posts: 259
- Joined: Sun Nov 19, 2006 5:42 pm
- What radios do you own?: M1225, HT100, P1225, etc
For just conventional channels you have to type in:
[list]Rx Frequency, PL Tone
Tx Frequency, PL Tone
Channel options, ID, Signalling, etc.[/list]
x how ever many channels you have.
You can't rush these things, if you want them to be correct, you have to look over each one several times and make sure it's 100% accurate or it may not work correctly.[/color]
[list]Rx Frequency, PL Tone
Tx Frequency, PL Tone
Channel options, ID, Signalling, etc.[/list]
x how ever many channels you have.
You can't rush these things, if you want them to be correct, you have to look over each one several times and make sure it's 100% accurate or it may not work correctly.[/color]
In God we trust. Everyone else, we run through NCIC, Thinkstream, and III.
Two other factors to consider, which will explain why radio shops hate to do radio programming:
First, it doesn't pay for itself. In terms of tech time required, you simply can't bill the customer at the actual tech's time charge times time required. So what you do is use programming to fill up otherwise unsold down time.
Second, it is a major source of customer dissatisfaction. I don't care how good a tech or how good a typist one is, there will be mistakes made. I don't care how good a proofreader one is, some of the errors will get past you. This tends to make programming (at least initially) an iterative process. This is find for a self-maintainer, but it irks customers no end.
And I should probably add a third factor: customers never specify what they want. Sure, you may get freqs and tones, but there are a bunch of other factors that have to be specified -- and what they are and what the options are varies widely amongst the models of radios -- and inevitably the programmer gets to the point where he has to guess. And as like as not, his guess has not adequately read the customer's mind. More do loops; more customers who think the shop is peopled by idiots.
First, it doesn't pay for itself. In terms of tech time required, you simply can't bill the customer at the actual tech's time charge times time required. So what you do is use programming to fill up otherwise unsold down time.
Second, it is a major source of customer dissatisfaction. I don't care how good a tech or how good a typist one is, there will be mistakes made. I don't care how good a proofreader one is, some of the errors will get past you. This tends to make programming (at least initially) an iterative process. This is find for a self-maintainer, but it irks customers no end.
And I should probably add a third factor: customers never specify what they want. Sure, you may get freqs and tones, but there are a bunch of other factors that have to be specified -- and what they are and what the options are varies widely amongst the models of radios -- and inevitably the programmer gets to the point where he has to guess. And as like as not, his guess has not adequately read the customer's mind. More do loops; more customers who think the shop is peopled by idiots.
That's not so much true anymore... This is why people wonder why some shops charge $75+ to program a radio. It's the only way to make money on it.RKG wrote:Two other factors to consider, which will explain why radio shops hate to do radio programming:
First, it doesn't pay for itself. In terms of tech time required, you simply can't bill the customer at the actual tech's time charge times time required. So what you do is use programming to fill up otherwise unsold down time.
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Yep. Like syntrx, I can type really quick. In my aptitude test for my current job, my average of 3 tests was 80wpm. That said, if I'm programming an Astro Spectra from scratch it's going to take me several hours. I think the longest I've spent programming a radio was a GE/Ericsson Orion. I did a programming job for a friend who wanted it "maxed out" for the 2m ham band. There were probably close to 1200 channels in the sucker, it took me well over 8 hours of pretty much non-stop work.
If you want a radio done "now", be prepared to pay a LOT of money for it. If however, you want it done on a budget, expect to wait awhile.
If you want a radio done "now", be prepared to pay a LOT of money for it. If however, you want it done on a budget, expect to wait awhile.
Plus assign functions to buttons, build scan list, set channel options like power level, TOT, 25 khz or 12.5khz, talk around, and a bunch of other little small details.Pimpala03 wrote:For just conventional channels you have to type in:
[list]Rx Frequency, PL Tone
Tx Frequency, PL Tone
Channel options, ID, Signalling, etc.[/list]
x how ever many channels you have.
You can't rush these things, if you want them to be correct, you have to look over each one several times and make sure it's 100% accurate or it may not work correctly.[/color]
hehe, it's attitudes like this from the big boys that have landed me some very good customersBruce1807 wrote:When I worked at an MSS in the UK we were not interested in single jobs like programming.
We used to ask for a copy of the license and that was usually the end of that. My boss used to give hams such a hard time on the phone it used to crack us up!
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- Batboard $upporter
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In my opinion, programming, especially complex public safety programming, is best left to the most competent person in the shop. That person may cost more in salary/benefits, but that person can also minimize customer dissatisfaction. This is a great post, it sheds light on the business of a shop vs "it should only take 30 minutes even though I wasn't here first".
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At the local shop in town that does all the tow truck radios and what not, they have a generic codeplug for just about every radio that they just clone/dump/shove into whatever radio the customer brings in. The operation takes them all of 5 minutes, but they charge $65 for it. Good business for them, they're always busy with that kind of thing.
I think you also find that a full MSS will not program public safety channels into radios bought in by Joe Bloggs etc without the proper documentation.
An MSSS can't afford to lose the MSS status as well as what public safety contracts he has , whereas a dealer has not done anything Motorola would be interested in, however the PS agencies might be interested.
An MSSS can't afford to lose the MSS status as well as what public safety contracts he has , whereas a dealer has not done anything Motorola would be interested in, however the PS agencies might be interested.
- Dorpmuller
- Posts: 75
- Joined: Tue Dec 05, 2006 11:41 pm
Now you know why I quit the radio business-each job I went to was worse than the last. The stress and other problems finally put me on permanent disability. Wouldn't wanna work for you! Sorry, but that comment got me, having been on the brown end of the stick working for a$$holes.mr.syntrx wrote:Programming is really easy money for a small shop. You can pay your apprentice $6/hr to do it, and bill it out for the full rate.
Rich
Last edited by Dorpmuller on Fri Dec 29, 2006 12:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
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I agree that paying someone $8 an hour or what have you to program radios is BS. However, there will always be people more than willing to do the job. It's the same with Security Guards or Construction Workers. The pay definatly does suck, but there are always people willing to work for whatever pay is offered.
That's first year apprentice wages, ie probably a 16 year old just out of school. Public safety programming is one thing, but programming one or two modes into a bunch of GP328's for the local mall, the kind of programming most shops do, is trivial.
Don't know how they do it up your way, but radio techs over here, just like any other trade, get qualified over the course of a four year apprenticeship (hence the reason I mentioned the apprentice), which is a mixture of classroom environment, technical college stuff and on-the-job training. Apprenticeship pay is lousy - that's just how it is. When they're fully qualified, they get pretty decent cash.
As for construction workers, my sister's SO is a builder's labourer. It's hard work, but he makes $25/hr, or about $60,000 a year (0.75 of that will get you US dollars). At the moment he makes more than I do, in the communications security field.
Don't know how they do it up your way, but radio techs over here, just like any other trade, get qualified over the course of a four year apprenticeship (hence the reason I mentioned the apprentice), which is a mixture of classroom environment, technical college stuff and on-the-job training. Apprenticeship pay is lousy - that's just how it is. When they're fully qualified, they get pretty decent cash.
As for construction workers, my sister's SO is a builder's labourer. It's hard work, but he makes $25/hr, or about $60,000 a year (0.75 of that will get you US dollars). At the moment he makes more than I do, in the communications security field.
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I was offered a job at a radio shop in western Ontario, with no experience or education at $9 hour. I know a few techs who are responsible for maintaining large public safety smartnet and smartzone systems who aren't making more than $15/hour. Up here unfortunatly, it just does not pay.mr.syntrx wrote:Don't know how they do it up your way, but radio techs over here, just like any other trade, get qualified over the course of a four year apprenticeship (hence the reason I mentioned the apprentice), which is a mixture of classroom environment, technical college stuff and on-the-job training. Apprenticeship pay is lousy - that's just how it is. When they're fully qualified, they get pretty decent cash.
As for construction workers, my sister's SO is a builder's labourer. It's hard work, but he makes $25/hr, or about $60,000 a year (0.75 of that will get you US dollars). At the moment he makes more than I do, in the communications security field.
Typical construction worker rates are anywhere between $8 and $15, depending on skill and trade.
Have times changed that much in Ontario? When I attended electronics school in T.O. over 12 years ago, we were being offered $10/hr just to be cellular installers. I myself made close to $30K after a few years, before I had to move out east & take a significant pay cut. Even with that, I now make close to $50K out here, along with a company vehicle. When I last talked to a couple of techs from Ontario while on course at Motorola, they were making approx 30% more than me for the same job.bellersley wrote: I was offered a job at a radio shop in western Ontario, with no experience or education at $9 hour. I know a few techs who are responsible for maintaining large public safety smartnet and smartzone systems who aren't making more than $15/hour. Up here unfortunatly, it just does not pay.
Typical construction worker rates are anywhere between $8 and $15, depending on skill and trade.
As far as programming goes, we have a standard rate of $25 for up to 16 channels. Anything beyond that is hourly at $65/hr. We guarantee it's done correctly, and will make any necessary changes (even if it's a result or incorrect/missing information from the radio owner) for free. We do however do it on a "first in/first out" basis...it waits in line with our regular repair log, unless prior arrangements have been made.
Todd
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