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#1
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Howdy All,
I've been through three sets of FRS radios. None have worked for the abuse I put them through. The first set got thrown off the mountain. The last set just went into the recycle bin and they were the most expensive at 130 a set. I knew I needed to take it up a notch, so earlier this year, I got a GMRS license through the FCC. Did it online for 85 bucks...Easy as pie. Need something that will handle back country abuse. In order of preference in terms of requirements:
I'm willing to pay decent coin ($300 each) for these things....Anybody do anything similar? How did you decide? And what about this confusing frequency business? Seems like ICOM and Vertex have really good warranties, Motorola is most common. Any help is greatly appreciated. |
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#2
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I have been thinking about this 2 watt unit and program it to MURS and to receive NOAA channels. No license needed. I am just balking at the $130+ price for each and may go with a GMRS and buy the $85 license. Not sure how tough it is but it is a comercial radio. Some say with VHF it may work better in the woods than GMRS even at only 2 watts.
Tekk XV100 Jeff |
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#3
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Quote:
__________________
Supporting eXRS. 10 Billion channels, no interference. TriSquare is a winner! |
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#4
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All of Midland's gmrs would fill most of your needs between $30 and $70 per pair. I have the gxt900 and get 5 days on Nimh 2900 mah rechargeable batteries at 8-16 hrs/day. 3 yr no fuss guarantee, that I have used! Heavy transmitting I imagine I could at least get 2 days. water resistant and pretty darn rugged, thick ABS. (Several bike wrecks and being run over by a car when the clip broke)
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#5
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I had a set of midlands, but in order to get a mic to work, you have to push the ptt button on the mic AND the ptt button on the radio, which was a bit of a pain...
The commercial radios that can be programmed for gmrs/fms sound interesting to me, as i am in the same position as Alan, having gone through a fair amount of the "cheap" fms/gmrs radios I am also looking for something more rugged. Is a commercial radio the way to go? |
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#6
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Commercial radios usually have a solid metal frame and they use heavy duty plastic. This makes them much tougher than a standard consumer radio. Another thing to look for are milspec rated radios, they are required to pass several test in regards to resistance to temperature, dust, moisture, and physical punishment.
Commercial radios are also more efficiently designed, this gives them longer battery life and more "usable" transmission power. That is why a 2 watt commercial radio will last longer and transmit better than a 5 watt consumer model. (As many on these forums have noted, often a 5 watt consumer radio just uses power a lot faster - reducing battery life - with little return from the extra wattage.) What you will often not have are the extra features that are common with consumer radios (NOAA alerts, display, easy to operate controls, 22 channels pre-programmed and ready to use, etc...). While most people looking for GMRS radios are more than happy with traditional models, if you need something a lot more durable and reliable we recommend programming a commercial grade radio to use MURS or GMRS frequencies. |
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