Maxtrac question
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Maxtrac question
just wondering if there was a uhf version that was trunking only. the reason i ask is there's a guy selling one locally and the model number's missing he knows for sure it's uhf the reason i'm asking is there is a sticker that says joe blow's what ever trunking with a phone number! i just didn't want to buy a trunking only uhf thanks jhook
BAT9228
There was a trunked UHF version from what i have been told and what i have read on here, but i have yet to see one in person. But it can most likely be converted to a conventional with reprogramming and firmware replacement anyway depending on which logic board it uses.
The label might have just been do to the companies primary business being trunking, though they also do radio repair on others. The only way to know for sure is to power it up and try reading it with RSS and see what happens!
Check and see if it's a 16 pin accessory connector on the back of the radio, if it is then it should be easy to reconfigure as a conventional with new firmware and blanking. If that turns out to be the case drop me a line and i can offer help with converting it. If the radio is in good enough shape and affordable no reason to not buy it even if it needs conversion.
The label might have just been do to the companies primary business being trunking, though they also do radio repair on others. The only way to know for sure is to power it up and try reading it with RSS and see what happens!
Check and see if it's a 16 pin accessory connector on the back of the radio, if it is then it should be easy to reconfigure as a conventional with new firmware and blanking. If that turns out to be the case drop me a line and i can offer help with converting it. If the radio is in good enough shape and affordable no reason to not buy it even if it needs conversion.
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"I Reject Your Reality And Substitute My Own!" - Adam Savage
There were a few "after market" trunking radios that I am guessing were versions of the Scholer-Johnson (SP?) variety. Similar to what they did on 800.
Lots of cut traces and jumpers on the bottom of the logic board. Seems to me they used the 16 pin connector for something special. Might not be easy to convert back. I had a couple of the 800 ones awhile back and just used them for parts. Just a possibility...
Lots of cut traces and jumpers on the bottom of the logic board. Seems to me they used the 16 pin connector for something special. Might not be easy to convert back. I had a couple of the 800 ones awhile back and just used them for parts. Just a possibility...
If Circle-M did have a UHF trunked offering, it would probably be of the LTR variety, though I have never 'seen' a UHF trunked mobile from the bat, I know they are out here.
There are also options available to convert a conventional radio into an LTR trunked radio from a few manufacturers I can't recall off the top of my head, but they are logic boards that had to be installed in the radio, and a firmware swap was needed as well to make them compatible with the LTR format.
Since LTR was developed by E.F. Johnson, but used in one format or another by Icom, Kenwood and Yaesu to name a few, and I know Motorola also had offerings in the LTR market as well.
I had 'assumed' incorrectly that the LTS/LCS series were LTR, but they are not, as I just dug into my sales flyers of years ago and see they are not LTR format.
There are also options available to convert a conventional radio into an LTR trunked radio from a few manufacturers I can't recall off the top of my head, but they are logic boards that had to be installed in the radio, and a firmware swap was needed as well to make them compatible with the LTR format.
Since LTR was developed by E.F. Johnson, but used in one format or another by Icom, Kenwood and Yaesu to name a few, and I know Motorola also had offerings in the LTR market as well.
I had 'assumed' incorrectly that the LTS/LCS series were LTR, but they are not, as I just dug into my sales flyers of years ago and see they are not LTR format.
jhook wrote:i believe thats what it is 403-433 so will that be a trunking split?
The 403-433 Mhz. range is commonly referred to as the 'government split' and has nothing to do with trunking systems at all.
Most common UHF segment for LTR trunking is in the 450-458 Mhz. range, and then in the 463-470 range depending on geographical area.
We have both segments here using these bands in central AZ.
How 'bout some deductive evidence? Several years back when I was an MSS manager, I never actually worked on the particular radios or checked the model numbers, but there were some low split UHF "government" Maxtracs in service with government facilities security personnel, and that system was definitely trunked. The button labels on the front were the same as the 800 trunking Maxtracs I did work on, they used the shorting plug to get to the test mode, and the "channel" labels on the laminated card taped to the top suggested very strongly that the system was trunked. Besides, when the techs who did work on 'em were testing them, they made all the same sounds as the 800 trunking units.
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