Advisory: MTR2000 VHF
Posted: Sun May 23, 2004 6:40 pm
Fellow batwingers,
This is a heads-up to anyone considering getting a VHF MTR2000 radio, and trying to put it on the 2-meter amateur band.
If you're going to do so, make ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN that you get a LOW-SPLIT (136-154MHz) unit! As far as I can tell, it is NOT possible to convert a high-split unit to low.
I learned this from bitter experience. I went as far today as trying to force-feed a low-split codeplug into a high-split unit. The image took, but the radio would not boot into operating mode, and it complained that the PA hardware and codeplug were not compatible.
I can only conclude that it's not just the station control module that holds the bandsplit information (I thought it was, and acted accordingly). It appears that said module is reading something in the PA's microprocessor or logic guts that tells it, in no uncertain terms, what the bandsplit is supposed to be.
The station resumed normal operation when I replaced the force-fed image with a correct one. Says something about how durable they are, I guess.
Anyway... unless someone else has learned some trick that I didn't try, I will say, once again, that a codeplug-level conversion of a high-split to low-split radio does NOT appear to be possible outside of spending huge $$ for a replacement PA assembly.
This is a heads-up to anyone considering getting a VHF MTR2000 radio, and trying to put it on the 2-meter amateur band.
If you're going to do so, make ABSOLUTELY CERTAIN that you get a LOW-SPLIT (136-154MHz) unit! As far as I can tell, it is NOT possible to convert a high-split unit to low.
I learned this from bitter experience. I went as far today as trying to force-feed a low-split codeplug into a high-split unit. The image took, but the radio would not boot into operating mode, and it complained that the PA hardware and codeplug were not compatible.
I can only conclude that it's not just the station control module that holds the bandsplit information (I thought it was, and acted accordingly). It appears that said module is reading something in the PA's microprocessor or logic guts that tells it, in no uncertain terms, what the bandsplit is supposed to be.
The station resumed normal operation when I replaced the force-fed image with a correct one. Says something about how durable they are, I guess.
Anyway... unless someone else has learned some trick that I didn't try, I will say, once again, that a codeplug-level conversion of a high-split to low-split radio does NOT appear to be possible outside of spending huge $$ for a replacement PA assembly.