Motorola R100 Repeater Problem
Posted: Mon Jul 24, 2006 3:23 am
We had a very strong severe thunderstorm here Friday it and knocked the repeater off of the air. A friend of mine owns it but is unable to reach the tower site, as it a long walk up a steep winding hill, and health problems prevent him from making the trip up to it.
The site owner lives at the bottom of the hill and we verified the initial problem was a power failure. However, after power was restored Saturday, the repeater still will not come up.
Today will be the first chance I have to go take a look at it due to my work schedule. I'll bring a volt meter with me to verify that it is getting the proper voltage to the particular outlet it is plugged into. I will also check to make sure that the breaker to it wasn't tripped due to a power surge when the power lines went down. (The service from the meter at the bottom of the hill up to the building itself is buried so there shouldn't be a power line problem from that location on up.)
Does anyone know what amp fuse this unit uses so I can take one up with me in case that's the culprit? There isn't any documentation for this unit as my friend bought it used (already installed) and the original owner lost the paperwork a long time ago. It is being used for GMRS (462Mhz).
Any other troubleshooting ideas that I can use without any service equipment other than a volt meter? As bad as I hate to say it, I think it probably took a direct lightning strike and is more than likely toast but I won't know for sure until I get there later this afternoon.
Thanks in advance for any advice. Even though I use Talk Around a majority of the time, a person doesn't really realize how handy a repeater comes in until it stops working.
Sincerely,
David H.
The site owner lives at the bottom of the hill and we verified the initial problem was a power failure. However, after power was restored Saturday, the repeater still will not come up.
Today will be the first chance I have to go take a look at it due to my work schedule. I'll bring a volt meter with me to verify that it is getting the proper voltage to the particular outlet it is plugged into. I will also check to make sure that the breaker to it wasn't tripped due to a power surge when the power lines went down. (The service from the meter at the bottom of the hill up to the building itself is buried so there shouldn't be a power line problem from that location on up.)
Does anyone know what amp fuse this unit uses so I can take one up with me in case that's the culprit? There isn't any documentation for this unit as my friend bought it used (already installed) and the original owner lost the paperwork a long time ago. It is being used for GMRS (462Mhz).
Any other troubleshooting ideas that I can use without any service equipment other than a volt meter? As bad as I hate to say it, I think it probably took a direct lightning strike and is more than likely toast but I won't know for sure until I get there later this afternoon.
Thanks in advance for any advice. Even though I use Talk Around a majority of the time, a person doesn't really realize how handy a repeater comes in until it stops working.
Sincerely,
David H.