nanaxshops.blogg.se

Kenwood Tk 880 Repeater
kenwood tk 880 repeater















  1. #Kenwood Tk 880 Repeater Portable And Temperary
  2. #Kenwood Tk 880 Repeater Free Shipping Free

Windows® Programming Software. I have opened the KPG-49D software & installed it to PC. Im VERY sorry if this question is answered, as i am new to the whole radio game thing yet again.

Kenwood Tk 880 Repeater Free Shipping Free

On some other models like TK-805D, there is a way to open it up and solder some connections for the rx tx, ptt, tone, gnd, etc. I'm about to pull the trigger on a pair or 880s and just wanted to do a bit more research before i do. Seller 99.6 positive Seller 99.6 positive Seller 99.6 positive.I'm looking to integrate a Kenwood TK-880-1 ver2 with a repeater controller. Free shipping Free shipping Free shipping. NOS OEM Kenwood Radio Speaker for repeater TKR-750 850 860 T07-0247-05 / 5W. Sale & Best Price No requirement fo x360ce in that case.Kenwood TK-880 (K) 25watts 450-490mhz GMRS/ FRS.

Current slide 1 of 1- Top picked items. Be the first to write a review. This is Kenwoods new andKenwood TK-880-1 ver2 40 watt (or Kenwood TK-840-1 25watt) - both inside the GMRS band.Kenwood Tk-880h UHF 450 - 490 MHz Mobile Radio. Wondering if the front RJ-11 would allow a custom cable? I'm going to most likely order a NHRC-3.1 controller so I'll have to make a custom cable anyway.Kenwood tk 880 FCC Type 1 Type 2 Fcc Parts Type 3 22,74,80,90 FCC Parts 22,74,80,90 FCC Parts 22,74,90,195 FCC Parts 22,74,90 FCC Part 90 Kenwood Series of TK-780 & Mobile Radio Products The TK-880 has many features to provide the ability to excel the performance of the radio system.

The 880 is hard to find details on, but i'll keep looking!The way i see it, i was going to get an older 800 series, like 805D or 840 but I found a dealer that was getting rid of older radios and told me they bench tested them, and gave me 30 days to return. But i'm not sure i need all that power, so i hope there is a lower 10 watt option for normal use. Plus, its a bit higher powered, not that i need that high of power anytime soon.Any experience connecting the 880's or 840s to a controller? I'm leaning more towards the 880s, for a few $ more, the version 2 gives me 40 watts. The 880 has a digital volume control and more features, so i think it would last longer, and i'd get more life out of it.

Kenwood Tk 880 Repeater Portable And Temperary

And i figured maybe if i found a good location, i would make it perminante with the NHRC 3.1 controler. Having the tk-880 not only give mes all the extra features, (keeping me busy playing with it) but this is a portable and temperary rig (for now). The two for repeater will second as a bsae station at home, and the third will be for my car. I got three radios in total. They tossed in the wire harness for $17 and no extra shipping.I'm looking into making the other cable myself after i see how the first one connects.

Here's a link to versoin 2 features in a PDF broshure: You're right, only the H is 40 watt. Also other features like that. Related info here: I also did some research and found that version 2 also has (besides your windows based programming) extra caller ID features where you can program a name and PTT ID so it will display the name on the screen.

Talk about a rip off, the OEM USB cable is over $100. I might not need the USB cable. I'll try it out when i get the radios next week. It CAN be programmed through the face plate, you hold down "D" while power up, and keep holding it for a few seconds, it goes into serivice mode. I might run it at 10 watts at fist just as i get my feet wet.Lastly. That's plenty for what i need it for.

I will either sell the parts, or take it to the next level and get the controler for it, and keep wirting it up, maybe some backup batteries, etc.Now to look for a bigger power supply. It will only be in operation a few hours over the weekends until i feel i have tested and played enough with it. But step one is getting the gear together, tested, range test, etc. I'm not sure i can get all the pinouts i need, but it would be a step up from the "poor man's repeater" using the simplex repeater system.If i put this repeater up and leave it up (add to this mygmrs.com database) it will have the 3.1 controler, announcing itsself, etc. The only otehr way to go cheaper is to get a pair of Baofeng 888s ($15 each) and program THEM and just tie them together with a hard line for now, then use the 3.1 controler later between them. The cheaper i go, the older and harder to prgram the thing will be.

kenwood tk 880 repeater

I've got an Icom F420 repeater running like that.If you wanted ID, I'd go with the above setup plus a Com-Spec ID-8. What you can do is build a crossover cable to go between the two radios similar to the way instructed here (though this is for Icom's). MDC-1200 does allow for select calling though (that may or may not be a need).You don't actually need a controller to run those as a repeater. If you have 0021 programmed in as Bob on your radio but on you're friends 0021 is Bill…it'll display Bill on your friends and Bob on yours.

A simple USB to RS-232 adapter is a good thing to have when you're dealing with older commercial radios (DOS has no definition of USB). I uses a vacant pin to program PL disable so when the system ID's, it disable's the transmit PL.You can buy the serial programming cable for around $15 online. I do something very similar with Motorola's and the cheap $10 repeater cable. It'll ID for you, give a courtesy tone (letting the TOT in the radios time) and can be programmed for hang time.

Also, special reserved Emergency,Emergency Man-down*, Emergency Mode Off *, Horn Alert(mobiles)* and Radio Stun/Acknowledge/Resurrect statuses(1 FleetSync ® “Basic” dispatch features are available using just 80-Series mobile/portable fleetRadios and an 80-Series mobile base/control station. FleetRadios can display and respond accordingly with complimentaryAcknowledgements. Fleet radiosCan display up to 100 caller names upon decoding PTT ID’s,(Caller ID enabled), Selective Calls, Status and Text Messages.Extended Status Message List (50*) provides up to 50Pre-stored sixteen-character alphanumeric messages permittingA base to send a larger variety of job task messages. This is available for fleet portablesCaller ID Stack* stores (in volatile memory) the three mostRecently received PTT IDs for recall and review, allowing a userExtended ID List Capacity (100*) allows a base station radioTo select up to 100 target fleet radios by nametag to sendFleetSync ® Selective Calls and Status Messages.

So i think it gives me a lot of options. It will also function as a simplex repeater. There is a "radio check" feature that i like where you DTMF a command and it will record what is hears next and repeat it back out.

kenwood tk 880 repeaterkenwood tk 880 repeater