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Highland AL and an experimental Baofeng UV5RC
13 March 2013, 08:45,
#31
RE: Highland AL and an experimental Baofeng UV5RC
I found this out to my cost,.. I am now waiting on what I hope is an extendable antenna that will fit/work,.. it really is hit and miss a bit with add on antenna's for this radio

Thats not to say that the radio is no good,.. for anyone wanting a hand held radio, the UV5Rs are the best I have come across with the antenna provided
A major part of survival is invisibility.
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13 March 2013, 10:53,
#32
RE: Highland AL and an experimental Baofeng UV5RC
Highlander,

you're right these are excellent little radios and are fine just with the supplied antennas. Additional antennas are useful if reception is marginal and you know what to buy.

I've found most flexibility is achieved by having BNC converters to both SMA male and SMA female connectors. Then aftermarket antennas are specified with BNC bases. This means that all antennas will connect to all radios. This lesson I learned at high £ cost :-)


LS
72 de

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26-TM-580


STATUS: Bugged-In at the Bug-Out
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26 June 2013, 10:59,
#33
RE: Highland AL and an experimental Baofeng UV5RC
(26 February 2013, 12:14)NorthernRaider Wrote: I'm hoping that AL is going to do a simplified article on the benefits of PMR446 and the frequencies around it based on the UV3 / 4 / 5 family but hes not online so it will come ( eventually) by post on a flash drive that i will post for him. If i had the money i would just buy the very simple but very handy ( and powerful) Intek MT5050 for my wife and kids and I would use the more fiddly UV5RC but the Inteks are double the price of the Uv5s

Catching up on stuff that's been discussed while I was away:

NR makes a good point: A choice between simplicity and Extra capability.

Intek 5050.
  • 100% legal to operate without any radio license (if un-modded)
  • Simple to operate out of the box
  • 8 PMR channels
  • 69 channels at ultra low power on the LPD frequencies*
  • Powered by easily obtainable AA batteries
  • Accessories available.
  • moddable for 5w power if required, but then license required for transmission.
  • Current cost (Jun 2013) around £70

Baofeng UV5r all versions
  • Legal to own and use for monitoring without a license, but to transmit legally, a license is required.
  • Complex to operate out of the box, and very poor supplied operating instructions
  • Covers all of the channels available on the Intek 5050
  • Additionally covers 2 Amateur bands, Marine Band and non allocated frequency ranges
  • Power switchable by button press between 1w and 4w
  • Programmable by computer, with possibility to pre-install standardised channel programming for the UK prepper community
  • High capacity bespoke power pack included, and AA/AAA power packs available as accessories
  • Wide range of low cost accessories available.
  • Current price (June 2013) from around £ 26.00

Both radios are able to carry the UV5R programming protocol that has already been proposed. The UV5R can carry this in whole and MT5050 in part, but the protocol will ensure that users of either radio type will be able to communicate between each other.

* an advantage of the un modded MT5050 is its ultra low power LPD channels. These channels run at just 10 miliwatts power, which is one fiftieth of the already low power of the PMR446 standard. This would provide very discreet transmission capability for very local use, in situations where we might not want to draw attention to ourselves..... between base and nearby observation points for example. Of course ultra low power transmission also equates to ultra low battery power consumption, so operational time is increased. The frequencies used on the LPD channels are in the Amateur Radio band, so would allow communication with very nearby Amateurs in an emergency.
72 de

Lightspeed
26-SUKer-17

26-TM-580


STATUS: Bugged-In at the Bug-Out
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