I have a question.
Does anyone have a 900 Mhz Motorola Quantar or MTR 2000 as a 900 Mhz amateur repeater, and if so does it work well.
Darren Rumas
N6vgu
MTR2000 or Quantar for a 900 Mhz Ham Repeater
Moderator: Queue Moderator
Re: MTR2000 or Quantar for a 900 Mhz Ham Repeater
VGMOOOOO
I don't believe you can get the MTR 2000 out of band to work in the amateur band. I could be wrong, someone please correct me if I am.
The Quantar stations work great, as do the MSF 5000 stations. I still need to get by your place and help you with that one.
I don't believe you can get the MTR 2000 out of band to work in the amateur band. I could be wrong, someone please correct me if I am.
The Quantar stations work great, as do the MSF 5000 stations. I still need to get by your place and help you with that one.
Re: MTR2000 or Quantar for a 900 Mhz Ham Repeater
There are 2 MTR2000 repeaters for 900 being worked on as we speak. They should be on the air soon. I will let you know as soon as they are.
Re: MTR2000 or Quantar for a 900 Mhz Ham Repeater
I know that some bandsplits of UHF or VHF or something wouldn't go out of band, so the 900MHz units do? This is good to know. Please keep me posted.
Re: MTR2000 or Quantar for a 900 Mhz Ham Repeater
What?d119 wrote:VGMOOOOO
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- Posts: 3
- Joined: Sat Oct 07, 2006 8:40 pm
- What radios do you own?: Moto, Icom, Alinco, Kenwood
Re: MTR2000 or Quantar for a 900 Mhz Ham Repeater
I have a Quantar station that I'm in the process of building up. I just programmed it up and checked it's performance on the Amateur bands - excellent! Very sensitive RX - my notes are buried, but I remember seeing the squelch open up at .09 uV. I ran some unscientific, adjacent channel tests and was quite impressed by its selectivity.
The transmitter is stable - I ran it for about a little less than an hour without a hitch. It was well within specs. The one I acquired had the hi-stab oscillator in it. With a little more than a decade of fiddling with the variants from this plaform, I'd recommend seeking one that came with this option. I don't know how stable this radio would be without it.
As far as the MTR repeaters go, I haven't had any hefty hands-on with them, so I can't speak good or bad about them.
The transmitter is stable - I ran it for about a little less than an hour without a hitch. It was well within specs. The one I acquired had the hi-stab oscillator in it. With a little more than a decade of fiddling with the variants from this plaform, I'd recommend seeking one that came with this option. I don't know how stable this radio would be without it.
As far as the MTR repeaters go, I haven't had any hefty hands-on with them, so I can't speak good or bad about them.
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- Posts: 8
- Joined: Wed Nov 29, 2006 7:36 am
- What radios do you own?: GTX/Spectra/XTL1500/MSF5000
Re: MTR2000 or Quantar for a 900 Mhz Ham Repeater
I am another one hoping that someone has successfully put the MTR2000 on the 900 ham band,. I have one and it easily sets to 902.XXXX as it should (its receiver span is spec'd at 896 to 915 MHz), but the transmitter will not go below 935 MHz. I have been told by a trusted source it probably can't be hacked below 935 MHz, but I am always hopeful! It sure is a nice looking radio and well built on the outside.
Roger W5RDW
927.1125/927.0750
Dallas Metro
Roger W5RDW
927.1125/927.0750
Dallas Metro
Roger, W5RDW
Murphy, Texas
Murphy, Texas
Re: MTR2000 or Quantar for a 900 Mhz Ham Repeater
Inside thing between myself and N6VGU.Rayjk110 wrote:What?d119 wrote:VGMOOOOO