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To all testing Ftp via DD at my qth

james
 

testing ftp via DD

Looks like i have this set up right so far. i can log into my ftp from repeater k2dig through nj2dg.
would like some test, to see if this works for anyone else. ill keep it hooked up for a day or so.

set cs to
ur rpt1 rpt2 my
ka2oon your dd rpteater w gateway your call

be sure your split is set to rps

set your ftp program to ftp site 10.105.255.144
thats my g2 ip address

login should be anonymous
no password

would like you to upload small text file w ur name and call etc

there r a few small files you might try downloading

in any case reply w how it worked for you

thanks

killing time with D-Star
Jim (ka2oon)


New file uploaded to D-STAR_23cm

 

Hello,

This email message is a notification to let you know that
a file has been uploaded to the Files area of the D-STAR_23cm
group.

File : /Applications & Usage/D-Star Repeater Linking User Guide V1.1.pdf
Uploaded by : wb9qzb_groups <wb9qzb_groups@...>
Description : D-STAR dplus Reflector Linking Guide by VK3UR

You can access this file at the URL:


To learn more about file sharing for your group, please visit:


Regards,

wb9qzb_groups <wb9qzb_groups@...>


Re: 10Ghz Rain Fading

 

Reply to my reply on Icom D-STAR General Forum.
?

-----Original Message-----
From: Subscription notification from ICOM America Forums
To: forumadmin@...
Sent: Fri, Oct 30, 2009 8:50 am
Subject: Subscription: RE: 10Ghz Rain Fading - by n7gzt | General

n7gzt at 10/30/2009 6:50:36 AM

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
? RE: 10Ghz Rain Fading
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Currently we are using Tranzeo 5.8 Ghz for our system here is Columbia, Sc
Using three foot dishes and 30 db radio, we are able to get 20 miles plus range.
Our gateway is located in the city and beamming to the tower ontroller site at
1000 feet.

N7GZT
pshreves@...
?

----------- End of Message -------------

The message can be located at:

http://www.icomamerica.com/en/support/forums/fb.asp?m=8673


This message is located under:

Category: D-STAR - http://www.icomamerica.com/en/support/forums/tt.asp?forumid=2
Forum: General - http://www.icomamerica.com/en/support/forums/tt.asp?forumid=37


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Re: Georgia Statewide ARES Network Receives Funding $$$ for D-S...

 

Kudos to the Georgia group! It's great to see their planning and hard work coming to fruition. Imagine if this level of integration could be established nationwide.

73,

Gary
WB5PJB


Great example of what's possible with good planning.

See message below &attached presentation.

$$$ Georgia statewide network receives funding $$$
??? Posted by: "WB4QDX" wb4qdx@... jdavis6129
??? Date: Thu Oct 29, 2009 4:38 pm ((PDT))

An official announcement will be released in the next few days, but it can be announced to the Amateur community that $165,000 in Federal funding has been secured by Georgia Emergency Management Agency(GEMA) to complete the statewide Georgia D-STAR network.? Equipment has already been ordered and is beginning to arrive.

This is a project that began back in 2005 with a vision for Amateur Radio emergency communications in Georgia. Georgia Public Broadcasting's former Director of EngineeringMark Fehlig, WA6NGC, seized an opportunity to install two Amateur Radio antennas on each of nine tall television towers that provide statewide Public Television coverage as a part of the required conversion to Digital Television.? Fehlig designated Georgia ARES to control the use of these facilities for emergency communications.

The next task was to determine what technology or mode would provide the best use of these sites for emergency communications.? After considering many modes and technologies including linked FM repeaters and packet.? About this time, the D-STAR digital technology was emerging as a state of the art platofrm for voice and data communications.? D-STAR allows flexible linking of repeaters and provides simultaneous voice and low speed data along with high speed datawith Internet connectivity on 1.2 GHz.

2 meter, 440 and 1.2 GHz voice and data repeaters will be installed on each of the nine television towers of Georgia Public Broadcasting (GPB). These nine towers are strategically located to provide near statewide Public Television coverage.? They will also provide similar Amateur Radio coverage from two antennas located between 500 and 600 feet above ground and connected with 1 5/8" transmission lines.? GPB will also provide indoor equipment space with backup power at each site.? Connectivity on GPB's robust DS-3 data network will be provided with Internet access to allow flexible linking of repeaters using the D-STAR technology.? Two of the D-STAR repeaters are already in operation at Pembroke, Georgia near Savannahand atop Stone Mountainserving the Atlanta metro area.

The funding also provides 20 dual-band D-STAR radios for installation at EMA offices around the state, a portable UHF D-STAR repeater for emergency deployment, three 1.2 GHz D-STAR radios with laptops for sending data and photos from field locations and a robust reflector to serve the Georgia network during emergency conditions and available for general use during non-emergency times. The complete Georgia D-STAR network should be in operation by early 2010.?

The Georgia network will complement other D-STAR systems planned or in operation in neighboring states of Alabama, Floridaand South Carolinacreating regional capabilities in the Southeast. Weather systems approachGeorgia either as severe thunderstorms and tornadoes from the West or tropical systems from the Gulf or the Atlantic.? Having flexible statewide communications will provide new capabilities to support emergency communications.

John Davis WB4QDX
District Emergency Coordinator
Georgia ARES





Georgia Statewide ARES Network Receives Funding $$$ for D-STAR Equipment

 

Great example of what's possible with good planning.
?
See message below & attached presentation.
?
$$$ Georgia statewide network receives funding $$$
??? Posted by: "WB4QDX" wb4qdx@... jdavis6129
? ? Date: Thu Oct 29, 2009 4:38 pm ((PDT))

An official announcement will be released in the next few days, but it can be announced to the Amateur community that $165,000 in Federal funding has been secured by Georgia Emergency Management Agency (GEMA) to complete the statewide Georgia D-STAR network.? Equipment has already been ordered and is beginning to arrive.

This is a project that began back in 2005 with a vision for Amateur Radio emergency communications in Georgia. Georgia Public Broadcasting's former Director of Engineering Mark Fehlig, WA6NGC, seized an opportunity to install two Amateur Radio antennas on each of nine tall television towers that provide statewide Public Television coverage as a part of the required conversion to Digital Television.? Fehlig designated Georgia ARES to control the use of these facilities for emergency communications.

The next task was to determine what technology or mode would provide the best use of these sites for emergency communications.? After considering many modes and technologies including linked FM repeaters and packet.? About this time, the D-STAR digital technology was emerging as a state of the art platofrm for voice and data communications.? D-STAR allows flexible linking of repeaters and provides simultaneous voice and low speed data along with high speed data with Internet connectivity on 1.2 GHz.

2 meter, 440 and 1.2 GHz voice and data repeaters will be installed on each of the nine television towers of Georgia Public Broadcasting (GPB). These nine towers are strategically located to provide near statewide Public Television coverage.? They will also provide similar Amateur Radio coverage from two antennas located between 500 and 600 feet above ground and connected with 1 5/8" transmission lines.? GPB will also provide indoor equipment space with backup power at each site.? Connectivity on GPB's robust DS-3 data network will be provided with Internet access to allow flexible linking of repeaters using the D-STAR technology.? Two of the D-STAR repeaters are already in operation at Pembroke, Georgia near Savannah and atop Stone Mountain serving the Atlanta metro area.

The funding also provides 20 dual-band D-STAR radios for installation at EMA offices around the state, a portable UHF D-STAR repeater for emergency deployment, three 1.2 GHz D-STAR radios with laptops for sending data and photos from field locations and a robust reflector to serve the Georgia network during emergency conditions and available for general use during non-emergency times. The complete Georgia D-STAR network should be in operation by early 2010.?

The Georgia network will complement other D-STAR systems planned or in operation in neighboring states of Alabama, Florida and South Carolina creating regional capabilities in the Southeast. Weather systems approach Georgia either as severe thunderstorms and tornadoes from the West or tropical systems from the Gulf or the Atlantic.? Having flexible statewide communications will provide new capabilities to support emergency communications.

John Davis WB4QDX
District Emergency Coordinator
Georgia ARES




Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

Steve
 

This has been battered around for years...so I'm not going to drag it out. But how many
Motorola commercial gear that is not part 97 and is modified for ham use? I bet there is probably a Motorola commercial repeater in every city in the US on the ham bands...mostly because most hams experiment, modify and
control the radios so they do not go outside the ham bands or disrupt other hams.

Thats the beauty of the hobby.

But getting back to the Backhaul and what you said...then doing backhaul on a none ham radio certified radio would not be a good idea...which also would mean not backhauling over the internet?

Interesting questions.

Steve N0FPF

On 10/29/2009 7:37 AM, Woodrick, Ed wrote:

Might want to check your FCC requirements. All Ham Radios that are for commercial sale in the US MUST be certified. We can use home-built radios on our frequencies as long as we meet the spectral and frequency requirements.

We can’t legally use a non-certified radio on other frequencies.

A common reason why a foreign produced radio is not offered for sale is that it operates on frequencies that are not allocated for the service in the US. Wi-Fi frequencies are a good example. The US frequencies aren’t the same as those in other parts of the world. That’s why manufacturers have different models for different countries.

Ed WA4YIH

*From:* D-STAR_23cm@... [mailto:D-STAR_23cm@...] *On Behalf Of *s.monsey@...
*Sent:* Wednesday, October 28, 2009 11:03 AM
*To:* D-STAR_23cm@...; D-STAR_23cm@...
*Subject:* Re: [D-STAR_23cm] Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

Correct...you buy it from Europe or Latin America...nothing wrong with that. They just haven't started mass producing it...if they ever will...

Hams use other radios not certified all the time.

It would be great to use another band.

Steve


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

 

开云体育

Might want to check your FCC requirements. All Ham Radios that are for commercial sale in the US MUST be certified. We can use home-built radios on our frequencies as long as we meet the spectral and frequency requirements.

?

We can’t legally use a non-certified radio on other frequencies.

?

A common reason why a foreign produced radio is not offered for sale is that it operates on frequencies that are not allocated for the service in the US. Wi-Fi frequencies are a good example. The US frequencies aren’t the same as those in other parts of the world. That’s why manufacturers have different models for different countries.

?

Ed WA4YIH

?

From: D-STAR_23cm@... [mailto:D-STAR_23cm@...] On Behalf Of s.monsey@...
Sent: Wednesday, October 28, 2009 11:03 AM
To: D-STAR_23cm@...; D-STAR_23cm@...
Subject: Re: [D-STAR_23cm] Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

?

Correct...you buy it from Europe or Latin America...nothing wrong with that. They just haven't started mass producing it...if they ever will...

?

Hams use other radios not certified all the time.

?

It would be great to use another band.

?

Steve

?


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

 

Correct...you buy it from Europe or Latin America...nothing wrong with that. They just haven't started mass producing it...if they ever will...
?
Hams use other radios not certified all the time.
?
It would be great to use another band.
?
Steve
?

-------------- Original message from "kb9mwr" : --------------

?

It is going from what I understand. The NanoStation 3 will likely never be certified for use in the US as it is mainly an overseas OEM product. The XR3, MiniPCI card can be bought in the US.

--- In D-STAR_23cm@yahoogroups.com, Steve .> wrote:
>
> OK...a write in campaign to Ubiquiti to get their 3 Ghz Nanostation
> going. It overlaps our 3 Ghz ham band.
>
>
> Suggested price is $87 Replace the software in it with OpenWRT.. Use
> it for back-hauls or mesh or what every your ham mind can come up with...
>
> Just a suggestion!
>
> Steve N0FPF


Re: DNS address

james
 

yes Scott is the one that mentioned 10.0.0.2
not having luck w 10.0.0.2 at all
cant even ping that address on either repeater.

ill check w Scott again.

thanks

JIM


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

jo3slk
 

For what it's worth....

--- In D-STAR_23cm@..., "erwestgard" <ewestgard@...> wrote:



--- In D-STAR_23cm@..., Bill V WA7NWP <wa7nwp@> wrote:

? We have been playing with surplus Ricochet poletops (free but not frankly going well so far)

Is there any info available about how to do anything at all with the
poletop units? They were on every third light pole out here. Some
are still sucking power and others are showing up at hamfests...

Thanks,
Bill - WA7NWP
Max, KB0RSQ and Dennis Boone KB8ZQZ (who wrote Trivnetdb 1.0 the magic Linux database software for us) has been working with these for several years. The poletop units are very undocumented and can be sometimes coaxed into a 100kb point to point mode on 900M. They also transmit on 2.4G at the same time and are mysterious. We had this idea to use these and the low buck USB PC adapters as a "poor ham's DD Mode" - we have poletops at some of our repeater sites as well as for site-site linking.


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

erwestgard
 

--- In D-STAR_23cm@..., Bill V WA7NWP <wa7nwp@...> wrote:

? We have been playing with surplus Ricochet poletops (free but not frankly going well so far)

Is there any info available about how to do anything at all with the
poletop units? They were on every third light pole out here. Some
are still sucking power and others are showing up at hamfests...

Thanks,
Bill - WA7NWP
Max, KB0RSQ and Dennis Boone KB8ZQZ (who wrote Trivnetdb 1.0 the magic Linux database software for us) has been working with these for several years. The poletop units are very undocumented and can be sometimes coaxed into a 100kb point to point mode on 900M. They also transmit on 2.4G at the same time and are mysterious. We had this idea to use these and the low buck USB PC adapters as a "poor ham's DD Mode" - we have poletops at some of our repeater sites as well as for site-site linking.


Re: Disappointed with 23cm digital data

erwestgard
 

--- In D-STAR_23cm@..., "Woodrick, Ed" <ewoodrick@...> wrote:

The ID-1 was sold without the control head at one point. No one bought them so they evidently went back to including it.

For the price to go down, they need to sell a lot more. I doubt if you'll see it going under the $300 mark anytime soon, the other radios will have to get there first.
We position the ID-1 as a club owned asset- you have a few of them and you use them with your repeater(s). We have about 15 up here various places, mostly installed in emergency vans and EOCs. DD Mode for us so far seems to be absolutely perfect for large scale, real world public service and a little boring and limited vs. the Internet for individual hamshack use.

The cost issue is all about sales volume and parts order sizes. I think they are repeater frequency constrained in Japan so use this band a fair amount.


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

 

It is going from what I understand. The NanoStation 3 will likely never be certified for use in the US as it is mainly an overseas OEM product. The XR3, MiniPCI card can be bought in the US.

--- In D-STAR_23cm@..., Steve <s.monsey@...> wrote:

OK...a write in campaign to Ubiquiti to get their 3 Ghz Nanostation
going. It overlaps our 3 Ghz ham band.


Suggested price is $87 Replace the software in it with OpenWRT.. Use
it for back-hauls or mesh or what every your ham mind can come up with...

Just a suggestion!

Steve N0FPF


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

Steve
 

OK...a write in campaign to Ubiquiti to get their 3 Ghz Nanostation going. It overlaps our 3 Ghz ham band.


Suggested price is $87 Replace the software in it with OpenWRT.. Use it for back-hauls or mesh or what every your ham mind can come up with...

Just a suggestion!

Steve N0FPF

On 10/27/2009 2:11 PM, mm0fmf wrote:

Moderator's Note: Great suggestion. Please post on the group anything you find about these linking tehcnologies.

It's 10 years back now but the German technology group ADACOM had
designs for 23cms and 6cms data radios.These were used a lot throughout
Europe for packet links at the time. Kits were available back then. Also
S53MV produced a number of 23/13cms data radio designs for home
construction. (1.288Mbps) I know that if you have a commercial pair of
link units you can get up and running faster but some people might like
to dig out the info on these designs with a view to using them for
links. And of course, using amateur gear is always nicer than commercial
gear.

Use Google (or your favourite engine) and seach for ADACOM, LinkTRX, and
S53MV.

Andy
MM0FMF


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

 

I remember these!

We toyed with the idea of building some back in the days of TVIPUG. We were amazed that they could find the time to design such a device seeing as how they were at war with each other.

That might also get around the LOS issue. 23cms will tolerate some obscurement so perhaps this is the answer?

Mark

On 10/27/2009 05:11 PM, mm0fmf wrote:
Moderator's Note: Great suggestion. Please post on the group anything you find about these linking tehcnologies.

It's 10 years back now but the German technology group ADACOM had
designs for 23cms and 6cms data radios.These were used a lot throughout
Europe for packet links at the time. Kits were available back then. Also
S53MV produced a number of 23/13cms data radio designs for home
construction. (1.288Mbps) I know that if you have a commercial pair of
link units you can get up and running faster but some people might like
to dig out the info on these designs with a view to using them for
links. And of course, using amateur gear is always nicer than commercial
gear.

Use Google (or your favourite engine) and seach for ADACOM, LinkTRX, and
S53MV.

Andy
MM0FMF



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Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

mm0fmf
 

Moderator's Note: Great suggestion. Please post on the group anything you find about these linking tehcnologies.

It's 10 years back now but the German technology group ADACOM had designs for 23cms and 6cms data radios.These were used a lot throughout Europe for packet links at the time. Kits were available back then. Also S53MV produced a number of 23/13cms data radio designs for home construction. (1.288Mbps) I know that if you have a commercial pair of link units you can get up and running faster but some people might like to dig out the info on these designs with a view to using them for links. And of course, using amateur gear is always nicer than commercial gear.

Use Google (or your favourite engine) and seach for ADACOM, LinkTRX, and S53MV.

Andy
MM0FMF


Metricom Pole Tops - Formerly: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

 

Played with them a little bit myself. Unfortunately, without the gateway they talk to they are pretty much useless. There is a guy in California that is currently trying to hack them out without much luck.

--- In D-STAR_23cm@..., Bill V WA7NWP <wa7nwp@...> wrote:

? We have been playing with surplus Ricochet poletops (free but not frankly going well so far)

Is there any info available about how to do anything at all with the
poletop units? They were on every third light pole out here. Some
are still sucking power and others are showing up at hamfests...

Thanks,
Bill - WA7NWP


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

 

? We have been playing with surplus Ricochet poletops (free but not frankly going well so far)

Is there any info available about how to do anything at all with the
poletop units? They were on every third light pole out here. Some
are still sucking power and others are showing up at hamfests...

Thanks,
Bill - WA7NWP


Re: Backhaul on Motorola Canopy 5.8 GHz

erwestgard
 

--- In D-STAR_23cm@..., Steve <s.monsey@...> wrote:

I did a 5.8 Ghz backhaul using Alvaion equipment for many years. Worked
just fine...until the noise floor went up. I was doing video over it. If
your in an urban area..like Seattle, the noise is getting worse and
worse as time goes by for long hauls. My longest path was 5.6 miles over
the City.
We are also pondering this issue. We have Linux thin clients behind each D-Star machine so can use the TCP/IP stuff. The noise floor in many areas is very high on 2.4 and 900 (Part 15). Long (10 mile) links on 802.11a/b/g are hard also without marginally legal add on amplifiers. We have been playing with surplus Ricochet poletops (free but not frankly going well so far) and think Canopy or some off brand modular dish radio units as described earlier might be OK.


Re: DNS address

 

Did you speak to Scott, KB2EAR?

He's the sysadmin for NJ2DG. He's the best one to talk to about their setup.

On 10/26/2009 06:36 PM, james wrote:
every thing i have read as to the DNS address on DD says 10.0.0.1
I cant get this to work on the mann mchn K2DIG, however this DNS works fine on the Martinsville Mchn NJ2DG. a local guy said the correct DNS address on all systems should be 10.0.0.2 I've had no luck with that at all. Please note ip addresses (not names) seem to work fine on K2DIG.
Can any one clear this up.

JIM (KA2OON)





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