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I've used a 12Ah Bioenno a lot in the field and it lasts a long time, 20 should be plenty. Beware the cheaper brands. A lot of them don't have all of the protections they claim to have. There are guys who do tear-down videos. There's a lot of energy in these batteries.I’ve been looking at setting up a 100W POTA kit. Most likely going to use a Yaesu Ft891, trying to decide what to get for a battery, probably around a 20 Ah. I have plenty of antennas from my QRP kit that I take when I air travel for work.
Also finally ordered an arborist slingshot setup to hopefully get my dipole antenna up a lot higher at my QTH.
I have a 4.5 Bioenno I used with my Icom 705, agree on buy quality. I’ve done lots of custom battery development for the day job, not worth the risk of cheap batteries. Need to head up to HRO in Salem and grab one this week. I think I’m going to do a custom build out in a Pelican case, no penetrations to the case but easy to deploy and connect once you open it up.I've used a 12Ah Bioenno a lot in the field and it lasts a long time, 20 should be plenty. Beware the cheaper brands. A lot of them don't have all of the protections they claim to have. There are guys who do tear-down videos. There's a lot of energy in these batteries.
For sizing, check out this calculator. Click here to download the spreadsheet (Rev 1 updated Feb 1, 23).
On a whim I tuned into the 10m FM calling frequency today. Nobody could hear me with my puny 5w, but I was listening to a guy in SD talking to people. Some I could hear, some I couldn't, but the guy in SD was S9+60dB for me, running 65w into a 5/8 vertical on his house. There was another guy I heard a few times; I think he was from the Netherlands. I don't know why but I always find 10m FM so intriguing.
The other interesting thing is repeaters. There are only a handful of frequencies so tones must be really necessary. I've never gotten into one myself. You almost have to pick one in CO or something.I have not thought about 10m FM in a very long time. Just out of interest I will have to see if either of my current antennas can tune that high (29.600 MHz).
Makes me think of the late 1970's early 1980's and listening up nearly that high on 10m for the AMSAT OSCAR-7 and 8 downlink passbands. Just listening, never had VHF-UHF uplink capability.
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I’ve been wanting to try this, need to setup a VHF/UHF radio at home. Curious what radio you’re using?Not really a thing I did, but this afternoon I traded a buddy of mine some hamsticks for a tape measure dipole he'd built. When he first made it, it seemed like it would be more trouble than it's worth, but he let me borrow it once and it worked really well. It's nice because being a tape measure the element lengths are right there to read. I just used a calculator to figure out how long they should be, stretched them out, and they were dead on. I'll probably make a cheat sheet so I don't have to do math every time. They're 50' long, so it'll work down to 60m.
If the wind lets up maybe I can get on the air with it this weekend.
In the meantime, I just listened for the ISS to pass by and didn't really get much of what people were saying. I couldn't pick up a complete call sign or anything. While I wait for the next pass I programmed in some Doppler shift frequencies so hopefully I can get a longer usable pass. I used these frequencies, but because my radio can listen on one band and transmit on another, I made separate Tx and Rx channels.
It took me a few minutes to wrap my head around having to listen at a higher frequency but transmit on a lower frequency and vice versa to compensate.
View attachment 976954
ISS Tracker: International Space Station
It's a Yaesu FT-8900R quad band (70c/2m/6m/10m) FM radio. They don't make it anymore, but there is a knockoff made by TYT that looks to be identical. I program it with Chirp.I’ve been wanting to try this, need to setup a VHF/UHF radio at home. Curious what radio you’re using?
What type of scrambler does the TYT TH9800 have? Is it the typical voice inversion type?It's a Yaesu FT-8900R quad band (70c/2m/6m/10m) FM radio. They don't make it anymore, but there is a knockoff made by TYT that looks to be identical. I program it with Chirp.
I forgot it does cross band repeat, too. It's kind of neat, but I don't have any practical use for that.
Edit, the last pass was hard to hear but I got a contact with a guy in MI. Headphones helped.
Edit 2: R&L has that 9800 even cheaper. I'm not endorsing it, it's just similar to one I have. TYT TH9800 [TH9800] - $179.95 : R&L Electronics, Amateur radio store
I didn't know it did. The Yaesu doesn't.What type of scrambler does the TYT TH9800 have? Is it the typical voice inversion type?