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Nz Amateur Beacons, Digipeaters, Repeaters And Sites

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Standard 1 MHz narrow band segment 2400-2401 MHz. SSB calling 2400.200 MHz, FM calling 2400.500 MHz, Beacons 2400.250-2400.300 MHz Repeaters – 20 MHz offset. Amateur satellite service in 2401-2450 MHz. 2400-2450 MHz is also designated for Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM) purposes 300 to 3410 MHz -9 c 3400 s 3410 3399 3355 3300 3359 3395 Amateur Radio Victoria is the licensee for the majority of VK3 repeaters. Our regular spend on Victorian Repeater maintenance is in excess of $20,000 each year, which includes equipment maintenance, insurance, site fees and licences. Repeaters and beacons listed may/may not be

Download a copy of the 33 cm Band Plan from this link NZ Fixed Stations For details of fixed Amateur Radio stations in New Zealand, go to the Repeater and Beacons maps page. HF Band Usage 80 m to 10 m A detailed page on HF band usage is available on this page which was curated by Mark ZL3AB and Gary ZL2IFB. New Zealand Bandplans Notes My radio constantly receives RF beacons from local mobile radios, igates, digipeaters. Whenever I transmit beacons or messages, they appear on the APRS-IS feed (the internet), which means they are successfully making it to an igate somewhere.

Finding Amateur Radio Repeaters - Locations, Frequencies, and more

Note: The UK Microwave Group is willing to assist with Microwave Beacons, their keepers and their technology development, to ensure that coverage is adequate, sustainable and feature-rich. Our Support schemes include:- Beacon Support funds/advice – Application form etc In some microwave bands Speech and TV Repeaters can be a useful aide. Data is on the RSGB ETCC These digipeaters receive a packet and then retransmit it to other digipeaters or end stations. Digipeaters follow the AX.25 protocol rules and are configured to handle packet paths.

Band plans and New Zealand Repeaters

Maps of the New Zealand Amateur Radio beacons, digipeaters and repeaters using Google Maps are now avaliable on the VHF Group Website at https://vhf.nz/maps . The maps are available as maps embedded into this website, displayed in Googler Maps and as KMZ files that can be displayed using Google Earth or any other software that reads KMZ files. Many times digipeaters will transmit under an alias, but the actual transmitting callsign is in the comment/status beacon. As u/VA7EEX and u/molo1134 said (between the two of them), go out to aprs.fi and pop in the callsign/alias for the digipeater. Updated 25 February 2025: ZL Amateur Radio Beacons 2024 have been updated plus their active status is available online. Please check these PDF’s for accuracy and report to the VHF Records Coordinator any mistakes you see, via email to John ZL2TWS [email protected]. Click to view the full sized spreadsheets in PDF format.

Georgia Amateur Radio Repeaters – Quick Search There are 476 Georgia repeaters in the database. VHF, UHF and Microwave Beacons Beacons provide an essential service for propagation, development and testing. The VHF, UHF and Microwave bands With 4 Repeaters and 9 Beacons MCBARG is now, de-facto, the UKs premier beacon and repeater cluster. Our tower is in critical need of maintenance. We have embarked on a programme of restoration starting with climber training and we are receiving much assistance it terms of skilled time and commercial donations. HOWEVER, repair and maintenance costs are

FAP10 Application process for amateur beacons and repeaters October 2024 107.52 KB FAP10 Application process for amateur beacons and repeaters Clark County, Nevada Amateur Radio Repeaters 198 REPEATERS FOUND IN CLARK COUNTY = On-Air = Off-Air = Testing/Reduced = Unknown Click on the frequency for additional details. Click on a header to sort. Note: Sorting does not carry through to exports! What are digipeaters and I-Gates? Two vital infrastructure components power the APRS network: digipeaters and I-Gates. Digipeaters (digital repeaters) work like voice repeaters but operate differently. They rebroadcast incoming APRS packets to extend the original transmission’s range.

  • NZART HEADQUARTERS INFO LINE
  • The New Ham’s Guide to Repeaters
  • San Diego County Amateur Radio Repeaters
  • Band plans and New Zealand Repeaters

But we can’t depend on the internet alone, so we have digipeaters as a back up. The goal of digipeating is to connect your beacon to an iGate and/or specific station. The iGate does this by transferring your beacon to the internet. The Digipeater will re-transmit your beacon, hopefully with more reach. ATV Repeaters Beacons Digipeaters Echolink_North_Island Echolink_South_Island NZ HF Band plain NZ National System NZ UHF Repeaters VHF Repeaters North Island VHF Repeaters South Island Wellington VHF and UHF Repeaters marine and CB channels QRZ callsign lookup: Metropolitan Amateur Repeater System Mid-Oklahoma Repeater Inc. Middle Atlantic FM and Repeater Council MinuteMan Repeater Association Minuteman Repeater Association Mountian Repeater Association N6ENV Repeater Group New Zealand – see top left column of this page Outer Banks Repeater Association Paw Paw Michigan area Repeaters

Digipeater “Digipeater” is short for “Digital Repeater”; a repeater for packet data rather than voice. Unlike the standard voice repeater that receives on one frequency and retransmits what it hears simultaneously on another frequency, the usual digipeater is a single frequency device.

NZ Repeaters / Frequencies Use these links to our NZART website to discover a local amateur repeater near you. Extended use of the National System and 6625 repeaters can cause significant heat build up. While the design of the system is such that the transmitters can be operated for extended periods without failure, we do request that use of the repeaters, especially the National System, is kept to a “reasonable” amount to avoid long term damage to

Local Area Repeaters VoiceDigital – RF Beacons & Repeaters Beacons For information about beacons, see: HF Beacons VHF, UHF and Microwave Beacons UK Repeaters The UK Repeaters site by RSGB ETCC gives detailed information about repeaters in the UK. Repeaters and beacons may operate only under repeater or beacon licences issued by the ACMA. Repeater and beacon licences may be held by Advanced or Standard licensees, but not by Foundation licensees. Repeaters and beacons must operate under the power limits and other licence conditions that apply to the person who holds the licence.

From the simple – checking the location of a site, to the complex – mapping all of the Amateur repeaters in the country Rob ZL2WAL will give an over view of some of the ways of using online maps for amateur radio, including an overview of the development of his automated system for producing online maps of the licensed NZ Amateur Radio Repeaters, Beacons & Digipeaters. The packets are then relayed to the APRS network, which consists of a series of Internet-linked gateways and digital repeaters ‘digipeaters’. APRS is a well-known technology among hams, with numerous applications in emergency communications, tracking, and Amateur Beacons 20 meters 17 meters 15 meters 12 meters 10 meters 6 meters 2 meters 70 cm 33 cm 23 cm 12 cm 5 cm 3 cm Amateur Digipeaters 10 meters 2 meters 70 cm Amateur Repeaters 6 meters 2 meters 70 cm 33 cm 23 cm Amateur TV Repeaters 70 cm Amateur Sites 101 ESK STREET INVERCARGILL (CIVIC ADMINISTRATION BUILDING) 1133 STATE

New Zealand 70 cm Band Plan 2022 Repeater links and Repeater 7 MHz offset Inputs (See Note-3) Earth-Moon-Earth (EME) All modes Guard Band (Oceania) Earth-Moon-Earth (EME) All modes (Region-3) JT65, MSK144, Q65, FT4, FT8. Narrow weak signal DX (All Regions) Narrow Band modes (Bandwidth 6 kHz or less) Oceania (External to NZ) SSB & CW Calling) FT8 Narrow Amateur repeater and beacons assignment process We are introducing more options for the amateur community to licence repeater and beacon services. We are also increasing the transparency of the frequency coordination process.

rsgb.online is part of the ukrepeaters website suite. The ukrepeaters site contains all the official UK repeater lists and access to various application forms to apply for a repeater or gateway. G0LGS: World-Wide 50MHz Beacons (by Frequency) Listing of Worldwide 50MHz Amateur Radio Beacons If you move the mouse over a station then you will see the coverage area and if this repeater/link is part of a network then you will see lines that join all the network nodes. If you click on a station you will see the station info. Use the mouse wheel to Zoom in/out.

Repeeper – Mt. Beacon Amateur Radio Club“I can’t wait for SPRING!!!
By Scott, KC2NTV, Corresponding Secretary
“I can’t wait for spring!!!” – Well, now that that’s out of the
way let’s talk about the winter we had!
At the February In Person Meeting, we voted in the
following hams to the MBARC:
• GREGG L LIGUORI WA2JPU

Link To support this process, the WIA has drafted four new Radio Communications Licensing Instructions (RALI) that describe the new rules for how frequency selection should be undertaken within the amateur service for amateur (frequency assigned) repeater and beacon stations. MARC operates three local amateur repeaters and two APRS digipeaters in the Montgomery County area. These are „open“ repeaters and are available to any licensed ham. Our 2m [146 MHz] repeater’s main transmitting and receiving site is located in Rockville, MD with several remote sites providing enhanced and extended coverage within the area.