I was a big user of 900 base/mobile simplex a few years back with a group of local chuckleheads. Luckily, we had a licensed 936 MHz frequency to play on, but I'm getting back into it in the 902-928 band.
-Simplex range in this band, as well as 700/800, is going to be very short compared to UHF and VHF no matter what you do and very susceptible to building and foliage attenuation. This can play out to your advantage, however, as most consumer-grade scanners have terrible receive sensitivity up at 900 making it difficult for scannerheads to pin you down.
-Don't go cheap on coax. Use white Teflon RG58 or LMR195 for your mobile installs and no less than LMR600 for base installs.
-Use the highest-gain antenna you can reasonably accommodate. Low-profile "beercans" and 1/4-wave spikes don't cut it mobile.. use center-loads, "pigtails", or dual-coil trilinear antennas. My personal favorites are
this one and
this one.
-You can do real good point-point with Yagis up high. For a while, I had a 9-element Yagi on a rotor up at 50' in my backyard that I could work mobiles with up to around 12 miles out.. with both of us using 12-watt radios.
-On that point, get high-power mobiles if at all possible, but don't completely write off the 12-watt radios. GTXes have the big added bonus of not needing any hardware modification to do 902-928; just bandsplit-hack the RSS and away you go. Ditto for the MCSes.
-Don't worry about whether antennas are spec'd for 902-928 or 896-902/935-941. The SWR curve is so broad it's irrelevant.