Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
As far as getting signals in and out of the shield can on the personality board, there are at least two options.
1) Put an SMA through the shield can and remote a BT antenna to the lock, label or J1
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RFI-EMI-GUY
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#106
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Nono, the chart on that page says *using the T-band for two-way* was
only permissible in the channel 17 range, in Houston. I.e. there wasn't
a channel 17 in that market, and presumably wouldn't be
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Dennis Boone
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#105
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Oh, I didn't look. I have been busing and having a hard time following all
this basically reading emails of it all in between running around doing
things so I thought the discussion was about the
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Casey Crane
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#104
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
For some reason I was thinking that SB9600 spoof was for a Spectra,but Spectras are even simpler. Jumper a pair of pins feeding the CH and it will auto power up on power cycle as desired.
Can you see
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swguest
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#103
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Wow this sure brings back memories to me, not good ones. Of arranging some engineers from Westinghouse Transportation to sign an NDA for a class on this at Plantation in about 1994, and then getting a
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RFI-EMI-GUY
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#102
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Good to know you and Mike preserved it. I was cleaning up bookmarks one day and found it a dead link. I hit the wayback machine, saved it as a.html, then converter that to a.pdf. A while later, poking
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swguest
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#101
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Another point of order in all this is the X9000 does a form of POST/BITE upon power-up. I found this out when trying to run one headless for a 6 meter repeater project. If it doesn't see certain
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Casey Crane
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#100
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
The people who did that work were Paul Kasley (W9TS) and Mike Blenderman
(K7IC). The original web page was at:
http://home.xnet.com/~pakman/syntor/syntorx.htm
That's long gone. There are copies of
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Dennis Boone
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#99
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
@ Skip...it's in the files section, at least I can see it bt I uploaded it. Did I need to set a global flag or someyhing?
PS Can I upload some non X/X9000 stuf for Lee if he is interested? I also
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swguest
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#98
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Lee,
Not to discourage you from getting your hands on that X9000, but have you seen/hard about a project called Maxduino?
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swguest
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#97
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Yea I believe I used the data from the service manual which defines the vco
range splits. Been a minute hah...
[email protected]> wrote:
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Casey Crane
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#96
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Pretty sure it enabled direct frequency entry as well. But I never used
it, as I wrote syntorxgen first, when I started playing with the radios.
Years ago we had a need for a packet link in the low
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Dennis Boone
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#95
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Well I can see it, hopefully others can as well.? I think you have to be a member of the list to see files, I tried a different account but I don't even see the files tag on the left.
Thanks, I was
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Skip Hansen
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#94
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Would love to see something arduino/pi based on these things. I don't see
a whole ton of Syntor X9000's in the wild -- I'm actually actively trying
to liberate one from an in-service fire truck (I
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Lee M. Lemoine
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#93
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Dennis,
Yup, That was it Range 1.5. It didnt add a 2m enhancement as well? - Acute CRS. I hope I never get called as an eye witness...lol? I have not looked at that RSS in some time.
I've never seen
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swguest
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#92
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
IIRC that configuration of that hacked RSS was sometimes referred to as
"Range 1.5". It had its v-bit splits modified to support the ham band,
but the retuned radio would have to be compatible with
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Dennis Boone
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#91
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Skip,
I dont know if I ticked "Notify Members" in time. I had already hit upload.....
Anyway Mototools is now in the files section...unless you mod the uploads...I didnt think about that.
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swguest
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#90
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Jeez Casey,
I looked back thru my "archives". Mike's post on the Synth control was 10 years ago this passed Christmas. He call them out in the sequence but didnt make the definition, except 800 Mhz?
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swguest
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#89
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Dennis,
I dont recall the particulars of the reg/latch sequence. I'm not sure his code addressed them. However he was rx'ing in the 10m band so they apparently were in the correct 1 of the 4 possible
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swguest
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#88
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Re: Has anyone fully decoded the X9000 memory mapping?
Skip,
Yup that got a lotta lotta good info in it......and? yes Spectras, A/S, MCS/MTS, and a lot more speak SB9600. To fully appreciate the coms you need to hook up your Spectra to your PC via you
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swguest
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#87
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