1600 lines
61 KiB
Plaintext
1600 lines
61 KiB
Plaintext
Path: uvm-gen!uunet!cs.utexas.edu!tut.cis.ohio-state.edu!att!tsdiag!ka2qhd!n2ihn
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From: n2ihn@ka2qhd.UUCP (Ed Thomas Long Branch NJ)
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Newsgroups: rec.ham-radio
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Subject: HF, VHF, UHF MODIFICATIONS FOR ALLMOST EVERYTHING
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Message-ID: <954@ka2qhd.UUCP>
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Date: 27 Jul 89 22:08:42 GMT
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Distribution: na
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Organization: KA2QHD,PBBS SYSTEM,OCEAN NJ
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Lines: 1588
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Keywords: PRINT THIS OUT, LOTS OF GOOD INFO.
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[M
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These are mods I've been saving off the system for a while. People
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keep asking for some of the same mods. Here are all of the mods and text
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that have been published, giving sources credit where I was able. If any
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of these mods are helpful to you, please send me any mods that you may have
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and don't see here.
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I am in need of the mod to use the CTCSS decode function on both bands
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of the TM-721A. If you have info on this, please let me know.
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Thanks to everyone that helped me with this. Enjoy!
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Ed Thomas, N2IHN.
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Mods for: 735,720,745,751,430,940,440,2600 ht
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ICOM IC-735
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To unlock the transmitter: cut diodes D33 and D34 that are standing on
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end near the microprocessor section toward the rear top of the radio.
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ICOM IC-720
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Transmitter is unlocked by snipping the light blue wire that's at the
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very end of the top hatch cover to the left middle side of the
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transceiver.
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ICOM IC-745
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Locate the RF board on the side of the radio and cut the light brown
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wire at jack 7., which is going to pin 1. Your transmitter is now
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unlocked.
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ICOM IC-751
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Locate the RF board on the side of the radio and cut the black wire
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going to pin 1 of jack 2. Your transmitter is now unlocked. (This
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mod also described in _73_, July 1985 p. 12.)
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KENWOOD 2600
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Locate the two diodes standing on end with Teflon covering the top
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part of their leads (which at one time were soldered together, broken,
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and then resoldered). Simply clip these two leads to unlock the
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transmitter, but be sure to reset the microprocessor by pushing the
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reset button before the set is capable of transmitting on any
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frequency at 150 MHz.
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KENWOOD TS-430S
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Unplug 3-wire plug on the RF board that mates with socket 10. When
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looking at the top front of the radio, it's to the left front side
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right beside a larger white plug. You'll need to carefully examine
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the circuit board and locate the number 10 with a circle around it to
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insure you have the right plug.
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KENWOOD 940
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Locate IC number 109. Now find diode 130 and cut it for all-band
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transmit. If you want just MARS coverage, locate IC 111 and 112, and
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snip diode 135 beside it.
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KENWOOD TS-440
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West,Gordon: "Kenwood 440 Modifications" _Popular Communica-
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tions_, October 1987 p. 62.
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Illustration captions:
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1. Remove 17 screws holding on the bottom and top covers. The bottom
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cover comes off, and the top cover is carefully removed and put next
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to the radio. It is till connected via the speaker wire.
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2. Gain access to the front of the unit by removing two top side
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screws and loosening two bottom side screws. This allows the front
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assembly to swing open.
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3. Remove the shiny silver control board protection plate. This
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requires removing two screws on the top and three screws on the
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bottom. Lift the plate out completely.
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4. Locate diode D-80 in the bottom left-hand corner. Snip it for
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all-band transmit.
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5. Now locate D-66 and snip. It adds 10 Hertz readout to your
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digital frequency display.
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6. Carefully reassemble the control plate using a magnetized tiny
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screwdriver to hold the five tiny screws in place. Don't pinch any
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wires. Also, close up the front and replace the top and bottom covers
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with 17 screws.
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7. Connect power. Depress A=B switch and turn on the power
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simultaneously. This resets the microprocessor for all-band transmit
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and 10 Hz frequency display.
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IC M-700, 757GX MODS:
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ED THOMAS, N2IHN
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YAESU 757GX
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Lert,Peter: "Bootleg HF Radios," _IFR_ magazine, Premiere issue,
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1985, p. 12.
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Open the radio and flip an unmarked but quite accessible switch.
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Article also describes airborne HF antennas.
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ICOM M-700 Marine Transceiver
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Despite that the literature says, no lock-out is employed. For ham
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frequencies on 40, 80 or 160 meters, set the mode switch to the hard
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left position of "A3," to enable the lower sideband filter (all marine
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HF uses upper sideband).
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IC-28A, IC28H, TH-215A MODS:
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ED THOMAS, N2IHN
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KENWOOD TH-215A handheld transceiver out-of-band modification:
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1. Remove two screws from belt clip
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2. Remove 4 screws from back of radio
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3. Slide front assembly off
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4. Locate set of 4 jumpers:
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(top front inside)
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+--------------------------------------+
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| +--------+ |
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| +--------+ |
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| +--------+ |
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J4: intact | J4 o---o | | |
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J3: cut | J3 o) (o +--------+ |
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J2: cut | J2 o) (o |
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J1: cut | J1 o) (o |
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| SPKR |
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| mic |
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+--------------------------------------+
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5. Reassemble radio.
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6. Reset microprocessor: Turn radio on while simultaneously pressing
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both _F_ key and _ENTER_ key.
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--
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DISCLAIMER: I do not own a TH-215A and have not verified the above
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information. Hopefully, the modified frequency range includes 162 MHz
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weather-broadcast freqs. Remember, it is ILLEGAL to transmit outside
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the ham band with non-FCC-type-accepted equipment, even if you are
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licensed to use such frequencies.
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ICOM IC-28A AND IC-28H
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To make the IC-28 transmit 138-174 MHz, cut D21 (no retuning
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required). D21 is a tiny glass diode standing on-end near the center
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of the upper circuit board, accessible by removing the top cover. The
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IC-28 is the only convertible ham rig I know that covers the 170-MHz
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federal government (including national park) frequencies.
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FT-411 OF YAESU,
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I have this Hand held, and by playing with it,
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I discovered anice trick to increase it frequency coverage.
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It is so simple that you don't even have to open your hand held.
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All you have to do is:
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1. Make sure that the power switch is off.
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2. press the UP arrow and DOWN arrow together, at the same time
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(those keys are also called A, and B.
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and they placed at the upper right side of the keyped)
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3. Keep pressing both buttons and turn the power on.
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That's all.
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Now you can receive 130-174Mhz, and transmit 140-150Mhz
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CAUTON: When you do this modification the memories can be
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erased.
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Ayhow I think it is not the end, and there are some more
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options.
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If you do have some more information about this Hand
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held,
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Please leave me a msg with it.
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FT 411 mods
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Here is some new interesting info about the FT-411:
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FT 411 OUT OF BAND MODIFICATIONS.
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---------------------------------
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1) Open the front cover
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2) Locate the C.P.U. unit (it is located on the
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front cover ).
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3) Locate Jumpers 1,2,3 and 4 , These are the
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band setting Jumpers
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4) Jumpers No 1,2 and 4 should be
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disconnected ,and Jumper No 3 should
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be connected.
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5) Close the radio .
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6) Apply power to the radio and turn it
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on.
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The display will initialize with
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memory No 1 flashing and the
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frequency display will show
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1.000
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7) Now , adjust the display to
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the desired lowest receive
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frequency
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When done ,press VFO.
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The memory CH will now
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show 2 flashing .
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8) Adjust the display to the desired highest receive
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frequency When done press VFO .
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The memory CH will now show 3 flashing .
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9) Adjust the display to the desired lowest transmit
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frequency
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When done ,press VFO.
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The memory CH will now show 4 flashing
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10)
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Now , adjust the display to the desired highest
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transmit frequency
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When done ,press VFO.
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The rig
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is now set for your programed band on transmit and receive.
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COMMENTS
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-------
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1)
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After the rig was programmed to the band and you want to change it
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to
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other ranges you will have to open the rig again and disconnect
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Jumper No 3 then to apply power to the radio ,turn it on again
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open it again ,connect Jumper No 3 back and repeat from steps 5 .
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YAESU FT-23R EXTENDED FREQUENCY RANGE:
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ED THOMAS, N2IHN:
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"Circumcising" the FT-23R is remarkably simple. Removing one solder
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blob (pad #7, clearly marked, 10 o'clock position from the speaker, 9
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o'clock from the microprocessor) lets the radio receive and transmit
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from 140.0 to 163.995 MHz. The two circuit boards with surface-mount
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components are uncluttered. When opening the radio, be careful not to
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lose the tiny coil-spring inside the battery-release button. I
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haven't measured receiver sensitivity, nor do I know about performance
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in big-city RFI; the FT-23R is considerably more sensitive at 162-MHz
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weather frequencies than is my modified Icom IC-02AT.
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Modifying the Kenwood TM-721A for Extended UHF Coverage
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Well I finally uncovered the specifics of the mod which will extend the
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UHF coverage of the TM-721A. This mod changes the UHF receive from
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it's factory setting of 438 - 449.995 mhz to approximately 420-460
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MHZ. There are some peculiarities surrounding this mod so I'll
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describe them first.
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First of all, this mod will allow the UHF digital display to traverse
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from 400.000 to 499.995. The radio will not, however, tune this entire
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range due to a combination of a limited synthesizer lock range and the
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input RF amplifier bandwidth. The apparent useful tuning range is
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about 420-460, with sensitivity dropping off sharply at either end.
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Naturally, the best performance is in the middle (the Ham Band :-).
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Similarly, the VHF tuning range is extended in the same manner. After
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the mod is made, the VHF side will apparently tune from between 100-199
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mhz but as stated above, there is little or no response outside of the
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published range (138-170 mhz), due to the same reasons as stated
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above.
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As a final side effect, note that performing this mod will remove all
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out-of-band transmit restrictions on the rig, for both VHF and UHF.
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After the mod is in place, the radio will transmit on any frequency
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that it can tune to.
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DISCLAIMER:
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The author of this report wishes to strongly remind those who perform
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this mod that it is ILLEGAL to transmit on any frequencies outside of
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the ham bands, EVEN IF YOU ARE OTHERWISE LICENSED TO DO SO. This is
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because of the radio's lack of FCC type acceptance for these
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frequencies. So beware! Unauthorized use of this feature could be
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hazardous to your ticket. MARS/CAP users are probably OK with a permit.
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Now for the nuts and bolts.....
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MODIFICATION PROCEDURE
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1. Turn the radio on and write down all of your memory channel
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frequency assignments, PL codes and anything else you have in memory -
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It will all have to be reprogrammed after the mod. After writing down
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all of your data, turn off the unit and disconnect it from the antenna
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and power supply.
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2. Next, remove the bottom cover on the unit. Note: this radio
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contains a number of CMOS parts which could be damaged by static
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discharge. Take all of the regular precautions to make sure that you
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and your tools are properly grounded for anti-static work. Note that
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there is a hole in the rear of the subchassis which supports the
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controller circuit board in which you can see a small, black, 1/4 watt
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resistor which is labeled on the board as R57. Using a small pair of
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sharp cutters, clip the lead on the end of the resistor. It is not
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necessary to remove the part, just clip one end and bend it slightly
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out of the way.
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3. Next, remove the top cover and then open the front panel assembly
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into the service position. To do this, remove the four silver screws,
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one on the top, one on the bottom, and one from each side. Two of the
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screws are in slotted holes. Loosen the screws in the slotted holes
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slightly so as to allow the front panel to be pulled out and swung down
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in a hinge-like fashion. Once open, set the radio on a table with the
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hinged front panel hanging over the edge of your workbench.
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Familiarize yourself with the inside of this compartment. The most
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notable features are a silver, button type lithium battery to the left
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of center and a large, multi-pin microprocessor chip on the right. DO
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NOT DISCONNECT ANY OF THE RIBBON CABLES.
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4. Locate the lithium battery and to it's left you will notice a row of
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five programming resistor positions, with the middle position vacant.
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The arrangement looks something like this:
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| ____ ______
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| I I:II (Bat-) |MPU |
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| (tery) | |
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| ---- ------
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| I <- R121 (remove for cross-band repeater operation)
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______________________________________________
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VVV front of rig VVV
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The (:) above indicates where a jumper is to be placed. Use care in
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soldering since everything is quite small.
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5. Reassemble the unit in the reverse order as described above. When
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you power the rig up, the display should show 440.000 and 144.000 on
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the displays. It is now ready for operation. If necessary, perform
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the microprocessor reset function by holding down the F button while
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turning on the power. Reprogram the unit with the data you saved in
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step 1.
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Comments:
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There is nothing special about operating the rig once the modification
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is made. All functions operate exactly as before except that the range
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on each band is extended as described above. You will probably want to
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program the band scan limiting channels (A and B) on both bands since
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otherwise your vfo scanning will be too broad and will spend a lot of
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time scanning in areas which it cannot receive.
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In addition, there also exists a cross-band repeater mod. I do not
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know if having this is a prerequisite to performing the mod mentioned
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above. If it is, then R121 will also have to be removed. The cross-
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band repeater mod has already been discussed on the net so I won't go
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into it at this time.
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Enjoy this mod but don't endanger your license! Don't transmit out of
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band and don't allow others to, even if they're licensed for those
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frequencies!
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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| Fred Lloyd KJ6RK PP-SEL flloyd@sun.com |
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| Sun Microsystems, Inc. ...sun!flloyd |
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| Mountian View, CA |
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| (415) 336-6322 |
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| Disclaimer: If it ain't broke, don't fix it! |
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--------------------------------------------------------------------
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First off, I want to thank Fred Lloyd, KJ6RK, for the excellent information
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that he gave us on modifying the TM721-A for UHF "General Coverage" . If
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you have made the mods though, you have no doubt found out that the receiver
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just can't seem to work much above 455.650 Mhz.
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Not being terribly familiar with Phase Locked Loops, I feel like its out of
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my league to chase this one too far. But for those who are knowledgable (sp?)
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about those things, here is what I found. I took a Cushman FM signal generator
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and started walking up the band in 25 khz steps, setting the Cushman first and
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then tuning the 721. At 455.650 Mhz the receiver would no longer solidly
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receive the signal, but instead it would slowly oscillate at about a 2 cps
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rate between white noise and a solid full-quieting signal. My guess between
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playing with the radio and talking to Fred Lloyd is that the PLL circuitry is
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simply at the upper limit of its range. Unfortunately, almost all of the local
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police frequencies that I want to listen to are in the 460-462 Mhz range.
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I want to point out that when the receiver was tuned to 455.625 the PLL was
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working normally and I was able to receive a full quieting signal with a .5
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microvolt signal, so we know that the problem isn't sensitivity. I suspect
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that there is a way to drag the VCO voltage "UP" so that you could use the
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"General Coverage" spectrum at the expense of the lower part of the amateur
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spectrum.
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At this point I'm going to throw the challenge back out there to you wizzards
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that eat and breath this digital/analog stuff to try and figure out what kind
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of alternatives are available to squeeze a little more out of the radios' UHF
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spectrum.
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Dave Allen
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KD0DE
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AT&T Bell Laboratories - Denver
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(303)538-4509
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Tuning the 721 UHF for 460 megs + :
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Edward Thomas, N2IHN
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1. FIND L4 & L3 on bottom of set, turn 4 screws CCW @ 3 turns.
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2. PEAK TC1, TC2,TC3 for signal strength.
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3. May need to tune TC102 for transmit output and TC101 for recv.
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TH-25AT TH-45AT
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Ok, I've promised it for a long time and now it's time to live up to my
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promises. Here are some mods for the TH-25AT and the TH-45AT. Please
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note that I do not encourage transmitting on a frequency for which you
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do not have a license, nor do I encourage transmitting on a non-amateur
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frequency without FCC type accepted equipment (in the United States).
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Lament: when are the Japanese going to produce a 440 FM HT for the US
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market that has receive coverage outside the US amateur band? Lord
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knows that there's a market for it - there's MONEY to be made.
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First let me recommend that you buy the service manuals for these
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radios. The service manual is not expensive (about $15 I think) and it
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will greatly help you in performing these modifications.
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Look at the schematic for your radio. In the lower left hand corner is
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an IC labled IC2. This is an ASIC microprocessor. At the lower right
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hand corner of this uP are several diodes and pull-up/pull-down
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resistors. They are D4, D3, R19, R18, R28, R20, R21, R22, R25, R26, and
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a couple of resistors that are not even on the schematic that attach to
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B2 (pin 51 on IC2) and B3 (pin 50 on IC2). The TH-45AT schematic shows
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R23 on the ASIC uP pin B2.
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The schematic for the TH-25AT shows:
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R18-R21 R25 R26,27 R28 R36
|
|
TH-25A M,M2 -12 O X X X X
|
|
TH-25A M3,M4,X -23 O X X O X
|
|
TH-25AT K -11 O O X X X
|
|
TH-25AT M,M2 -12 O X X X X
|
|
TH-25E T -52 X X O O O
|
|
TH-25E W -62 X O O O O
|
|
|
|
And the schematic for the TH-45AT shows:
|
|
|
|
R19-R21 R22 R23 R25 R26,27 R28 R36
|
|
TH-45A M1,M2,X -21 O O O X X O X
|
|
TH-45A M3,M4 -22 O X O X X X X
|
|
TH-45AT K -10 O X O X X O X
|
|
TH-45AT M1,M2 -21 O O O X X O X
|
|
TH-45AT M3,M4 -22 O X O X X X X
|
|
TH-45E T -51 X O X X O X O
|
|
TH-45E W -61 X O X O O O O
|
|
|
|
where O means USED, and X means NOT USED.
|
|
|
|
Some of the above codes are:
|
|
K USA
|
|
T England
|
|
X Australia
|
|
M Other Areas
|
|
|
|
These components are found on the flexible circuit board under the
|
|
display. To get to them, take the radio apart. Some unsoldering of
|
|
obvious grounding wires may be necessary. You will see where the
|
|
flexible circuit board plugs into a socket on the main circuit board.
|
|
Before unplugging it, make sure you know what's in the memories, because
|
|
they will be lost. Unplug the flexible circuit board and unfold it so
|
|
that the components are accesable. One of the fold-out parts of the
|
|
flexible board will look something like this:
|
|
|
|
+----------------+
|
|
| R R R D3 R R |
|
|
| 2 2 2 7 2 |
|
|
| 5 3 2 1 |
|
|
| |
|
|
| R O O R20| The O's are solder pads.
|
|
| 2 O O R19|
|
|
| 6 O O R18|
|
|
| O O R28|
|
|
| |
|
|
| R |
|
|
| D4 6 |
|
|
| +-------+
|
|
| |
|
|
| |
|
|
|
|
The fold out board is actually square, but with only characters for
|
|
graphics, I couldn't draw it that way.
|
|
|
|
On both radios, R36 is for the European tone burst to "whistle up"
|
|
repeaters.
|
|
|
|
On both radios, D4 is for selecting the type of display. With D4 in,
|
|
the display is normal. With D4 removed, the display is a channel
|
|
display.
|
|
|
|
D3 is for selecting VHF or UHF. With D4 in, the radio thinks its a VHF
|
|
radio. With D4 removed, the radio thinks its a UHF radio. Don't change
|
|
this on your radio.
|
|
|
|
On the TH-25AT:
|
|
(All frequencies given in MHz.)
|
|
|
|
R22 in
|
|
R28 out
|
|
This is how the radio is delivered in the USA. TX 144-148, RX 141-163
|
|
(I think).
|
|
|
|
R22 out
|
|
R28 in
|
|
The radio tunes from 142-151. This may be the modification given
|
|
to US MARS members. I don't remember where the unit will transmit. It
|
|
may or may not transmit outside the range from 144-148.
|
|
|
|
R22 in
|
|
R28 in
|
|
The radio tunes only from 144-148.
|
|
|
|
R22 out
|
|
R28 out
|
|
Frequencies may be selected from 100-200 MHz (on the display only - your
|
|
PLL will not lock up in this entire range). In addition, TX is possible
|
|
where your PLL locks up.
|
|
|
|
R25 out
|
|
Removing R25 disables automatic offset selection.
|
|
|
|
R23 and R24 are used for selecting the step size for tuning. I can't
|
|
remember which positions are for which step sizes, and alas I didn't
|
|
write down what I found. If you want to play with this, go ahead.
|
|
|
|
On the TH-45AT:
|
|
(All frequencies are given in MHz.)
|
|
|
|
R18 in
|
|
R28 in
|
|
This is how the radio is delivered in the USA. The radio covers
|
|
438-450 MHz.
|
|
|
|
R18 in
|
|
R20 out
|
|
The radio is prohibited from tuning outside 440-450 MHz.
|
|
|
|
R18 out
|
|
R28 in
|
|
The radio will only tune from 215-230 MHz. Note that the PLL would not
|
|
lock up! (What did you expect?) Could it be possible that Kenwood
|
|
originally planned a 220 version of this radio, but then scrapped their
|
|
plans?
|
|
|
|
R18 out
|
|
R28 out
|
|
The radio will tune from 200-500 MHz (on the display only - your PLL
|
|
will not lock up over this entire range). Transmitting is possible
|
|
anywhere your PLL will lock up.
|
|
|
|
I have found a quick and easy way to retune your PLL (in the TH45-AT)
|
|
with a minimum of test equipment. All you need is a scope and a small
|
|
tuning tool. First, take off the battery pack holder plate. Then,
|
|
remove the silvery sticker covering the tuning pot access holes. If the
|
|
radio is positioned on its back, with the top folded over so that the
|
|
touch tone pad is also facing down, the test point you want (TP1) is on
|
|
the bottom half of the radio, near the center (left to right), and close
|
|
to the battery; the tuning pot you want (TC1) is on the bottom, and
|
|
closest to the PTT switch. Under no circumstances change the tuning of
|
|
TC51. This is used to calibrate the output of the radio with the
|
|
display the radio is giving; you don't want to mess with it. Once
|
|
again, the Service Manual makes it very clear where these points are, if
|
|
you are having trouble with my descriptions. On with retuning the PLL.
|
|
With the radio on, and receiving, monitor the voltage and the waveform
|
|
on test point TC1. Tune the radio DOWNWARDS in frequency until the PLL
|
|
unlocks. Note that the radio will beep when this happens, and the
|
|
waveform on TP1 will change. Tune the radio about 1 MHz higher so that
|
|
the PLL locks up again, and note the voltage on the testpoint, TP1.
|
|
Now, tune the radio to the LOWEST frequency that you want to be able to
|
|
receive. Adjust TC1 until the voltage on the test point TP1 is the same
|
|
as what was noted earlier. Button the radio back up, and you're
|
|
done. You will not be able to tune the PLL to any range you want.
|
|
There are limits. On my radio, I have been able to retune the radio so
|
|
that I can recieve from 439.2-468.6 MHz with a set of batteries fresh
|
|
out of the charger. The tuning range will probably diminish as the
|
|
battery voltage decreases. I have not retuned the PLL on my 2m HT, but
|
|
I'd imagine the same technique will prove fruitful.
|
|
|
|
I may have some more information on these radios someplace. If I can
|
|
find it, I will add to this posting, and post it again with the updated
|
|
information. Enjoy.
|
|
|
|
----> Abortion is murder; Affirmative Action is discrimination. <----
|
|
In the rare case that original ideas Kenneth J. Hendrickson N8DGN
|
|
are found here, I am responsible. Owen W328, E. Lansing, MI 48825
|
|
Internet: hendrick@frith.egr.msu.edu UUCP: ...!frith!hendrick
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
IC 32A MOD
|
|
|
|
1. Remove battery and antenna.
|
|
2. Loosen two screws on top of unit as much as possible without removing them.
|
|
3. Loosen 4 flat head screws on bottom of unit 1 turn.
|
|
4. Loosen 2 screws near PTT switch 1 turn.
|
|
5. Remove 4 black screws on back of unit.
|
|
6. Lift bottom of front cover .25 inch, slide it down .25 inch, then lift
|
|
front cover up 1 inch.
|
|
7. Disconnect plug on 4 wires coming from the speaker.
|
|
8. Lay front panel on table up-side down being careful of the flex circuit.
|
|
9. All mods are done to the back of the front panel. Notice places for 5
|
|
axial diodes, which I will call 1 through 5, 1 being nearest the display.
|
|
Add/remove diodes so there are diodes in positions 3 and 5. This will
|
|
open up receive coverage for VHF & UHF and enable keyboard entry of the
|
|
10 MHz digit.
|
|
10. Notice 4 surface mount resistors slightly left of center directly above the
|
|
speaker, lined up in a row. Solder the anode (the side without the bar)
|
|
of two diodes to the right side of the lower of the four caps. Now find
|
|
the CPU. It's the PGA under the shield near the top of the board. Find
|
|
the row of pins on the CPU nearest the speaker. Notice the the 8th pin
|
|
from the right has a thicker trace coming from it. Now notice that there
|
|
are small solder pads about .25 inch toward the speaker on both the fat
|
|
trace and the two traces to the right of it. Solder one each of the
|
|
cathodes of the 2 diodes to the solder pads on the two smaller traces.
|
|
This will open up the transmit for VHF & UHF.
|
|
11. Put unit back together in reverse order.
|
|
|
|
This procedure worked for my unit (and many others), but I can't
|
|
guarantee it will work for yours.
|
|
|
|
Bill Pherigo
|
|
WR0Y
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Hello to all the owners of the FT-411 OF YAESU,
|
|
|
|
|
|
I have this Hand held, and by playing with it,
|
|
I discovered a nice trick to increase it frequency coverage.
|
|
It is so simple that you don't even have to open your hand held.
|
|
All you have to do is:
|
|
|
|
1. Make sure that the power switch is off.
|
|
2. press the UP arrow and DOWN arrow together, at the same time
|
|
(those keys are also called A, and B.
|
|
and they placed at the upper right side of the keyped)
|
|
3. Keep pressing both buttons and turn the power on.
|
|
That's all.
|
|
Now you can receive 130-174Mhz, and transmit 140-150Mhz
|
|
CAUTON: When you do this modification the memories can be
|
|
erased.
|
|
Ayhow I think it is not the end, and there are some more
|
|
options.
|
|
If you do have some more information about this Hand
|
|
held,
|
|
Please leave me a msg with it.
|
|
|
|
Tnx, AVIAD, 4X6TL@4Z4SV
|
|
1508z, 635 msgs, #24083
|
|
last @KD6TH-4 MailBox>
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FT 411 OUT OF BAND MODIFICATIONS.
|
|
---------------------------------
|
|
1) Open the front cover
|
|
|
|
2) Locate the C.P.U. unit (it is located on the
|
|
front cover ).
|
|
|
|
3) Locate Jumpers 1,2,3 and 4 , These are the
|
|
band setting Jumpers
|
|
|
|
4) Jumpers No 1,2 and 4 should be
|
|
disconnected ,and Jumper No 3 should
|
|
be connected.
|
|
|
|
5) Close the radio .
|
|
|
|
6) Apply power to the radio and turn it
|
|
on.
|
|
The display will initialize with
|
|
memory No 1 flashing and the
|
|
frequency display will show
|
|
1.000
|
|
|
|
7) Now , adjust the display to
|
|
the desired lowest receive
|
|
frequency
|
|
When done ,press VFO.
|
|
The memory CH will now
|
|
show 2 flashing .
|
|
|
|
8) Adjust the display to the desired highest receive
|
|
frequency When done press VFO .
|
|
The memory CH will now show 3 flashing .
|
|
|
|
9) Adjust the display to the desired lowest transmit
|
|
frequency
|
|
When done ,press VFO.
|
|
The memory CH will now show 4 flashing
|
|
|
|
10)
|
|
Now , adjust the display to the desired highest
|
|
transmit frequency
|
|
When done ,press VFO.
|
|
The rig
|
|
is now set for your programed band on transmit and receive.
|
|
|
|
COMMENTS
|
|
-------
|
|
|
|
1)
|
|
After the rig was programmed to the band and you want to change it
|
|
to
|
|
other ranges you will have to open the rig again and disconnect
|
|
Jumper No 3 then to apply power to the radio ,turn it on again
|
|
open it again ,connect Jumper No 3 back and repeat from steps 5 .
|
|
|
|
Any
|
|
comment and other information would be appreciated.
|
|
|
|
Good Luck
|
|
Aviad 4X6TL@4Z4SV
|
|
|
|
disclamer: I have not tested or verified the above, proceed at your own risk.
|
|
WA2ISE
|
|
|
|
|
|
..........................................................................
|
|
. Mark Bramwell, VE3PZR .
|
|
. .
|
|
. The University of Western Ontario Bitnet: MBRAMWEL@UWO.CA .
|
|
. School of Business Administration Packet: VE3PZR @ VE3GYQ .
|
|
. London, Ontario, N6A 3K7 Phone: (519) 661-3714 .
|
|
..........................................................................
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
I was unhappy with the FT-411's "3" mode because the frequency had
|
|
to be entered starting with the 100 MHz digit, and the ARS function would
|
|
not work. I now use it in the "2" (normal) mode with the following mod.
|
|
I used the "clone" mode to dump the FT-411's ram to a computer. It's 9600
|
|
baud, 1 start bit, 1 stop bit, CMOS logic. 544 bytes are dumped when the
|
|
up arrow is pressed. Starting with byte $211 are the upper and lower
|
|
transmit and receive frequencies, stored in BCD. I changed these to the
|
|
limits I wanted. My FT-411's upper PLL limit is 195.4 MHz, so I used
|
|
195 MHz. The lower limit MUST remain set to 130 MHz (magic number) or
|
|
the keyboard entry of frequencies will start with the 1 MHz digit .VS.
|
|
the 10 MHz digit. To put the data back into ram, just press the down arrow
|
|
and send the new 544 bytes to the FT-411. You could also just clone an
|
|
H.T. that has the limits you want. You can not clone a mode "3" H.T. to
|
|
a mode "2" H.T., however. The mode is contained in the first byte, which
|
|
must match.
|
|
|
|
Bill Pherigo
|
|
WR0Y
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Yeasu 470 RX:
|
|
|
|
|
|
Here is a reposting of the mod to extend the receive range of the new
|
|
Yaesu dual band handie to 130 - 180:
|
|
|
|
1. Turn radio OFF.
|
|
2. Hold down both UP and DOWN arrows.
|
|
3. Turn radio back ON.
|
|
|
|
Thats all there is to it!
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
FT209 RH:
|
|
|
|
|
|
The magazine article says to jump pins 1, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13, and 16.
|
|
In every 209RH I've opened, pins 1, 9, and 13 are already jumped.
|
|
Adding jumpers 7, 10, 11 and 16 allows "out-of-band" transmission.
|
|
But the receiver becomes thoroughly confused, and is not tunable.
|
|
The solution: DON'T jump 11 and 16.
|
|
|
|
So the final steps are:
|
|
1) Add jumpers to 7 and 10.
|
|
2) Give the VCO can a 1/2 turn clockwise if you're moving to higher freqs.
|
|
3) Reset radio and reprogram rcv and xmit freqs, and rptr offset.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
PRO-34 Scanner Modification
|
|
|
|
In regard to the information presented (March Issue) on the
|
|
handheld Radio Shack PRO-34 scanner, my own observations on the
|
|
modifications have been:
|
|
|
|
1. To restore missing 800 MHz frequencies, remove D-11.
|
|
|
|
2. To add 66 to 88 MHz (European Coverage), install a diode at
|
|
D-9.
|
|
|
|
3. D-10 must remain in place for full 800 MHz coverage.
|
|
|
|
4. If a diode is added at D-13 it cuts out aero band, also seems
|
|
to affect 800 MHz channel spacing.
|
|
|
|
5. D-12 added dosen't seem to have any affect.
|
|
|
|
6. Only D-10 and D-11 are factory installed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RADIO SHACK 2004 EXPANDED COVERAGE:
|
|
|
|
|
|
1. Remove the 4 philips screws on the back of the unit that
|
|
hold the case onto the chassis.
|
|
|
|
2. Slide the radio out of the case by pushing it out the front.
|
|
Or, put another way, slide the case back, off the radio.
|
|
|
|
3. Once you've eased the radio out, turn it upside down with the
|
|
front toward you.
|
|
|
|
4. Locate a board with "PC-3" stenciled on it in big white letters.
|
|
It is roughly in the middle of the radio near the back.
|
|
There is a rectangular, highly reflective (mirror-like) metal
|
|
cover covering most of this board.
|
|
|
|
5. Gently remove this metal cover. It is held on by being press-fit
|
|
over little metal dimples. A little careful prying will do the
|
|
trick here.
|
|
|
|
6. Once the cover is off you should see the main CPU chip on the
|
|
right, a resonator crystal (501-X I think?) in the rear right
|
|
corner, and a vertical row of diodes to the left of the CPU chip.
|
|
Some of diode positions will be lableled like this D-509, D-510,
|
|
D-511, D-512, *D-513*, etc. I don't remember exactly which ones
|
|
are labled or not, but that's not so important right now, you
|
|
should get the idea.
|
|
|
|
7. The diode D-513 is labled (I know) and this is the beastie that
|
|
disables the cellular phone frequencies and their 30KHz search
|
|
step size. Snip this diode with diagonal cutters (or whatever).
|
|
Make sure the snipped wire ends are not touching, and viola!
|
|
You've got full 800MHz coverage on your Pro-2004.
|
|
|
|
8. You may want to test it at this point. (Try entering 880 MHz or
|
|
some other previously disabled 800MHz frequency, and verify that
|
|
you don't get an ERROR.) Re-assemble.
|
|
|
|
PS: There is a TURBO-Scan mod where you can up the scan speed to
|
|
around 30ch/s by replacing the resonator crystal in step 6 with a
|
|
10MHz version. Also, by soldering in a diode in what would be diode
|
|
position D-510 (if it were labled) you can add 10 channels to each
|
|
bank for a total of 400 ch. The problem with this is that then the
|
|
keypad's labelling for channel banks becomes incorrect. You should
|
|
get and verify the complete details on the mods in this "PS" because
|
|
I can't supply you with complete instructions that I am 100% sure
|
|
about on these. I'm just letting you know they're possible...
|
|
|
|
A carrier operated light for the PRO-2004 [repost]
|
|
|
|
Several PRO-2004 owners have asked for a repost of this article:
|
|
|
|
|
|
A CARRIER OPERATED LIGHT FOR THE PRO-2004 SCANNER
|
|
|
|
by Bob Parnass, AJ9S
|
|
|
|
The July 1988 issue of Monitoring Times suggested that it
|
|
may be easy to add an S-meter to the Radio ShackO PRO-
|
|
2004 scanner:
|
|
|
|
"...But adding an "S" meter is even easier than previ-
|
|
ously thought. Pin 10 on the IF amplifier (IC1) is an
|
|
"S" meter output. With the proper bridge or meter
|
|
buffer/amplifier an "S" meter is reality...."
|
|
|
|
Brace yourself for disappointment - the integrated cir-
|
|
cuit mentioned in the article is used for WBFM only.
|
|
Despite the internal IC block diagram in the service
|
|
manual, pin 10 on my PRO-2004 is useful as an S-meter
|
|
output only when the radio is in the WBFM mode.
|
|
|
|
Between pin 10 and ground, I placed a 10,000 ohm resistor
|
|
in series with a 250 microamp meter for a simple test
|
|
setup. The meter read full scale on strong signals.
|
|
With no signal at all, the meter read about 70% of full
|
|
scale. When the mode is set to AM or NBFM, the meter was
|
|
always at zero.
|
|
|
|
One could add a bridge circuit here, but this metering
|
|
point is of limited utility.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Add a Light Instead
|
|
|
|
With a room full of functioning scanners, it's difficult
|
|
to determine quickly which radio is "talking." I use
|
|
separate external speakers on each radio, and the spatial
|
|
separation helps.
|
|
|
|
In addition to "hearing" which radio is active, I like to
|
|
"see" which radio is active, and carrier operated lights
|
|
are effective at providing such visual cues. The idea is
|
|
to illuminate a lamp when a signal opens the squelch. A
|
|
small yellow light emitting diode (LED, another Bell Labs
|
|
invention) is well suited to this purpose. The following
|
|
modification works well on all PRO-2004 modes.
|
|
|
|
To add a COR light to the PRO-2004, make use of the "scan
|
|
control" pin (pin 13) on IC2, the TK10420 IC. Pin 13 has
|
|
voltage present only when a signal is detected. This
|
|
chip contains the IF, detector, limiter, and squelch cir-
|
|
cuitry for NBFM.
|
|
|
|
If you tremble with an electric drill in your hands, read
|
|
no further. The LED can be mounted in a small hole
|
|
drilled through the plastic front panel, just to the
|
|
right of the headphone jack.
|
|
|
|
Electronically, the circuit is simple. The voltage at
|
|
pin 13 is not enough to drive the LED directly, so a gen-
|
|
eral purpose NPN transistor (e.g., a 2N2222) can be used
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as a solid state switch.
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- Pin 13 of IC2 is connected to the transistor base
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through a 10,000 ohm resistor.
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- The emitter is grounded.
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- The collector is connected through a 1000 ohm resis-
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tor to one end of an LED. This resistor limits the
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LED current to about 13 milliamps.
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- The other end of the LED is connected to one contact
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on the rear of the PRO-2004's on/off, volume con-
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trol. This furnishes about 14 VDC unregulated circuontacire cs co ounteon afastea
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THE RADIO SHACK PRO-2005 PROGRAMMABLE SCANNER
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by Bob Parnass, AJ9S
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Manufactured in Japan by General Research Electronics,
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the Radio Shack PRO-2005 is a 400 channel, wide coverage
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scanner radio, incorporating NBFM, WBFM, and AM modes.
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It is the successor to the PRO-2004, the super scanner
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which put Radio Shack out in front of its competition in
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the base station scanner market.
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The 2005 is basically a 400 channel PRO-2004, built using
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surface mount components, and housed in a smaller pack-
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age.
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Frequency Coverage
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Radio Shack's last minute decision to remove cellular
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telephone frequency coverage from the PRO-2004 caused a 7
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week delay in its introduction. The PRO-2005 appeared in
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the stores promptly on the heels of the 2004 closeout
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sale. Both the PRO-2004 and PRO-2005 cover 25-520 and
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760-1300 MHz, except for 2 gaps in the cellular telephone
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bands. The two gaps in the 800 MHz range can be restored
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in either scanner by clipping a diode.
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A matrix of diodes, attached to the microprocessor's
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input port, is often used to configure radios for sale in
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different markets. The diode matrix on new the PRO-2005
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is located on the vertical circuit board just behind the
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front panel. There are 2 diodes present, and holes
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drilled for 2 more.
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Lots of Memory
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The PRO-2005 has the usual features that scanner buffs
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have come to expect: individual channel lockouts,
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selectable rescan delay, an external speaker jack, etc.
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But, the 400 channel capacity of the PRO-2005 sets
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another an industry record, just as the 300 channel PRO-
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2004 did! Casual scanner users may scoff at the useful-
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ness of having so many channels, but seasoned monitorists
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can have those channels filled up in no time flat, espe-
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cially with frequencies in the vast 225-400 MHz military
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air band, and other federal government allocations.
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With so many channels to program, one dreads the thought
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of a power failure, which could clear memory in a hurry.
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Not to worry, the PRO-2005 memory is backed up by a
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- 2 -
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conventional 9 volt alkaline battery (not supplied). The
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400 channels are divided into 10 banks of 40 channels
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each, and one can select or deselect any channel bank
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from the scan list. Individual channels can be locked
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out in the customary way, but the PRO-2005 maintains the
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handy feature introduced in the PRO-2004, a LOCKOUT
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REVIEW. Successive depressions of this key step through
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the locked out channels.
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Scanners worth their keep have a priority feature, with
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channel 1 usually designated the priority channel. The
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PRO-2005 is more flexible; any of the 400 channels may be
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designated the priority channel. When the PRIORITY key
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is depressed, that channel will be sampled every 2
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seconds, and the radio will stay there if a signal is
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heard.
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The PRO-2005 has two scan speeds, approximately 8 and 16
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channels/second, although one would probably use the fas-
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ter speed in most instances. This is the same speed as
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the stock PRO-2004, as measured by your reviewer. A
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diode could be added to the PRO-2004 diode matrix to
|
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speed up the scan and search rates by 25%. The provision
|
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for extra diodes in the diode matrix makes one hopeful
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that the same speedup trick can be applied to the newer
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PRO-2005.
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When programming a channel, the PRO-2005 firmware sets
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the mode automatically, based on its idea of what mode is
|
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most prevalent on that frequency. This feature saves
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extra keystrokes, and makes one appreciate the thought
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that went into the design of this radio. The default
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mode can be overridden easily, if need be, like to listen
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to a NBFM satellite in the 225-400 MHz range, which is
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mainly populated with AM signals.
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Searching
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The SEARCH facility found on most programmable scanners
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allows the entry of a pair of frequencies, then by press-
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ing a key, the radio searches frequencies between those
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limits. The PRO-2005 allows for 10 pairs of limits!
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These pairs of limits are stored in their own memory, and
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don't use up any of the conventional 400 memory channels.
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One can set up several search pairs, for instance:
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- 46.610-46.970 MHz: cordless telephones
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- 144-148 MHz: the 2 meter ham band
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- 3 -
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- 30.01-30.56, 32-33, 36-37 MHz: US Govt
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Another unique feature is the MONITOR key, which stops
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the search and stores the frequency in one of ten special
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monitor memories. These memories are separate from the
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400 main memory channels. The search can be restarted
|
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from where it left off by striking the up or down arrow
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key.
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The user can select the search direction (up or down),
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and step size of 5, 12.5, or 50 kHz, although the PRO-
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2005 is intelligent enough to select a default step size
|
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based on the frequencies being searched. As on the PRO-
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2004, there is a hidden step size of 30 kHz, but
|
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apparently this step size was disabled when the cellular
|
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telephone frequency coverage was removed.
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The selected parameters are displayed on the LCD panel,
|
|
smaller than the panel in the PRO-2004. Search speed is
|
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switchable between slow and fast, with fast search being
|
|
about 14 increments/second (versus 12 for the
|
|
Uniden/Bearcat 800XLT). For a 12.5 kHz increment, this
|
|
translates to 11.2 MHz/minute (versus 9.6 MHz/minute for
|
|
the 800XLT).
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The DIRECT key allows one to start searching up or down
|
|
from whatever frequency is on the display. Let's say the
|
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scanner is in MANUAL mode, and set at channel 26, which
|
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contains 460.100 MHz. Striking the DIRECT then UP-ARROW
|
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keys starts the PRO-2005 searching upwards from 460.100.
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This is a nice feature.
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The PRO-2005 contains a "window detector" circuit, which
|
|
is called into play during a SEARCH operation. This cir-
|
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cuit tries to detect when the radio is tuned close to the
|
|
center frequency of a station, and prevents the search
|
|
from halting prematurely, off to the side of the signal.
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|
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The AFC (automatic frequency control) circuit of the
|
|
Bearcat 800XLT often causes a search of 850 MHz signals
|
|
to halt prematurely. Even though the signal sounds on
|
|
frequency, the display reads the wrong frequency. Nei-
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ther the PRO-2004 nor the PRO-2005 have this problem.
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The PRO-2005 includes a SOUND SQUELCH, resembling the VSC
|
|
circuit on the Icom R-7000, which may be used during scan
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or search operations. With the the sound squelch
|
|
enabled, signified by a red lamp above the pushbutton,
|
|
the scanner will skip over unmodulated signals. This is
|
|
handy for skipping over "birdies", or link signals with a
|
|
constant carrier.
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- 4 -
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The manual warns that the sound squelch may be fooled by
|
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signals with low modulation, and skip over them. The
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PRO-2005 SOUND SQUELCH tries to detect the presence or
|
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absence of modulation (not human speech), so unfor-
|
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tunately, it thinks that noisy dead carriers, digital
|
|
data signals, and paging tones are worth monitoring and
|
|
will stop the scanner to listen to them.
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Taping Facility
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A tape recorder can be connected to the TAPE phono jack
|
|
on the rear panel, which provides 600 mV of audio at a
|
|
10,000 ohm impedance. An audio filtering circuit rolls
|
|
off the high frequency components before they reach the
|
|
TAPE jack, which makes it impossible to use it for pick-
|
|
ing off FM subcarrier signals. In addition to a rear
|
|
mounted external speaker jack, there is a miniature head-
|
|
phone jack on the front of the scanner.
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The PRO-2005 lacks a COR (carrier operated relay) output,
|
|
like ICOM R7000 and older Bearcat 300 have, which would
|
|
be useful for actuating a tape recorder.
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Basic Performance
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To evaluate sensitivity, the PRO-2005 was compared with
|
|
it's father, the PRO-2004. Since a signal generator was
|
|
not used, quantitative measurements could not be made.
|
|
Instead, an Antenna Specialists AV-801 antenna was
|
|
switched between radios, signals from stations were com-
|
|
pared by ear, and the results tabulated.
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|
Simply put, the PRO-2005 proved moderately more sensitive
|
|
than the PRO-2004 on most bands tested, and just slightly
|
|
more sensitive on a few bands. The cost one pays for the
|
|
2005's increased sensitivity is having to put up with
|
|
hearing 800 MHz trunked systems and cellular telephone
|
|
conversations while searching the 118 - 132 MHz commer-
|
|
cial aircraft band. The 800 MHz interference was heard
|
|
only on the 2005, not the 2004. Other than that, inter-
|
|
modulation interference from paging affected both
|
|
scanners to the same degree, and on the same frequencies.
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|
Although both the 2004 and 2005 can suffer the effects of
|
|
intermod, they are much more immune than the overly sen-
|
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sitive, image laden Bearcat 800XLT. The PRO-2005 has a
|
|
10 dB attenuator, operable by a slide switch on the rear.
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- 5 -
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The up conversion design of both the ICOM R-7000 and
|
|
Radio Shack PRO-2005 allows use of a very high IF (inter-
|
|
mediate frequency), which helps avoid image problems.
|
|
The PRO-2004 owner's manual contains a frequency alloca-
|
|
tion chart and a section on images. This section appears
|
|
in the manuals for other Radio Shack models, and was
|
|
thoughtlessly thrown into the 2005 manual. It babbles on
|
|
about images being 21.4 MHz away from the real frequency
|
|
-- true for simpler models, but not so for the PRO-2005.
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|
|
|
The audio output quality is good, although the top
|
|
mounted speaker directs the sound at the ceiling, but
|
|
adding an external speaker would allow the sound to be
|
|
directed at the user.
|
|
|
|
Unfortunately, the audio level of AM signals is somewhat
|
|
below that of NBFM signals, requiring a different setting
|
|
of the volume control. When scanning both AM and NBFM
|
|
modes, one has to find a compromise position of the
|
|
volume control.
|
|
|
|
The PRO-2005 squelch control has a wee bit too much hys-
|
|
teresis, a trait inherited from its ancestors. It's like
|
|
having too much play in a car's steering wheel, or back-
|
|
lash in a gear set. This hysteresis forces one to keep
|
|
the squelch at a tighter setting, missing weaker signals
|
|
when scanning or searching. It's not as sloppy as in the
|
|
early PRO-2004s. I've successfully eliminated this prob-
|
|
lem completely by replacing a single resistor on the
|
|
800XLT, as well as the PRO-2002, PRO-2003, PRO-2004 and
|
|
PRO-24 scanners.
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Mechanical Construction
|
|
|
|
The PRO-2005 is lighter than the 2004. It is enclosed in
|
|
a gray plastic cabinet, with a plastic front panel. If
|
|
one is going to pay $420, one deserves to own some metal,
|
|
but several stages are internally shielded in their own
|
|
metal compartments. The entirely plastic cabinet of the
|
|
older PRO2003 allowed wideband noise to radiate out of
|
|
the scanner and into nearby shortwave receivers.
|
|
|
|
The PRO-2005 vertical front panel is an advancement over
|
|
the sloping panel of the 2004. Now you can stack the
|
|
scanner on top of other equipment and see the controls
|
|
without standing up. If sitting directly on a table, two
|
|
hinged plastic feet, padded with rubber bumpers, can fold
|
|
out from under the front of the radio to tilt it at a
|
|
good viewing angle.
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- 6 -
|
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|
|
There is a single BNC antenna connector on the rear of
|
|
the PRO-2005, and a single telescoping antenna is sup-
|
|
plied.
|
|
|
|
Internal construction is excellent, and the internal
|
|
shielding is commendable. Interstage shielding is very
|
|
important in a wide band receiver, to prevent it from
|
|
"hearing itself", an undesirable phenomena which results
|
|
in birdies. The PRO-2005 owner's manual lists the birdie
|
|
frequencies. The shielding is much better in the PRO-
|
|
2005 than in the 800XLT, which uses no shielding around
|
|
the 800 MHz converter stage, and probably accounts for
|
|
some of the birdies in the Bearcat.
|
|
|
|
Frequencies and other indicators are displayed on a back-
|
|
lit LCD (liquid crystal display) panel, and the level of
|
|
backlighting can be dimmed by a pushbutton switch.
|
|
|
|
Vision impaired scanner buffs will appreciate the conven-
|
|
tional raised rubber keyboard in the PRO-2005, which
|
|
replaced the flat membrane keyboard in the PRO-2004.
|
|
Only moderate pressure is required for actuation, and key
|
|
depressions are confirmed by a mild "beep" audio tone.
|
|
|
|
The PRO-2005 is the right size to fit under the dashboard
|
|
of intermediate sized cars. Although it can be operated
|
|
on 12 VDC, neither a mobile power cord nor mounting
|
|
bracket are provided. These items were included with
|
|
earlier, pre-PRO-2004 Radio Shack models. The AC power
|
|
cord is not detachable, and would have to be bundled up
|
|
to keep it out of the way in a mobile installation.
|
|
|
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|
|
Owner's Manual
|
|
|
|
The user manual is outstanding compared with the fold out
|
|
sheet furnished with Uniden scanner.
|
|
|
|
A single page frequency allocations chart is included,
|
|
but is not current. There is no schematic. Thankfully,
|
|
detailed service manuals for Radio Shack scanners are
|
|
usually available for $7.50 or $10.00.
|
|
|
|
The PRO-2005 is warranted for 1 year, which is reassur-
|
|
ing.
|
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|
|
|
|
What's Missing?
|
|
|
|
So with all these neat features, what's missing from the
|
|
PRO-2005? A "search and store" mode, like that on the
|
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|
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- 7 -
|
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|
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ICOM R7000 and older Bearcat 250 would have been nice. A
|
|
lighted keyboard and a signal strength meter would also
|
|
be welcome, as would a mobile mounting bracket and SCA
|
|
output jack.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Summary
|
|
|
|
If all one wants is a scanner to monitor local police and
|
|
fire, there are certainly cheaper and simpler models than
|
|
the PRO-2005. This scanner is for those who enjoy
|
|
actively exploring voice communications in the VHF/UHF
|
|
spectrum. If you already own a PRO-2004 and have added
|
|
the diode to expand it to 400 channels, there is little
|
|
to be gained by purchasing a new PRO-2005 -- unless, of
|
|
course, you are a passionate scanner collector.
|
|
|
|
The PRO-2005 has the right features and performance,
|
|
especially for scanning the wide 225-400 MHz military
|
|
aircraft band. Good design should not to be taken for
|
|
granted. GRE engineers used the power of the micropro-
|
|
cessor to implement useful features in the PRO-2005.
|
|
Similar processing horsepower was not used so wisely in
|
|
the Yaesu FRG-9600.
|
|
|
|
At about $420, the PRO-2005 provides a good alternative
|
|
to those not wishing to spend $1050 for an ICOM R7000.
|
|
|
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BC200/205XLT CELLULAR RESTORATION
|
|
|
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|
|
Note: It is unlawful to monitor cellular telephone conversations. It is
|
|
possible to monitor signals from the deleted ranges even without conversion.
|
|
Simply add 21.7 MHz to the deleted frequency and enter the higher (image)
|
|
frequency. Reception is virtually identical in strength to that which would be
|
|
heard on the deleted frequency.
|
|
|
|
The frequencies deleted at the factory may be restored, but the procedure must
|
|
not be attempted by anyone unfamiliar with electronic circuitry. Grove
|
|
Enterprises assumes no liability for damage caused by this procedure. The
|
|
modification will void your warranty.
|
|
|
|
TOOLS REQUIRED: Small Phillips screwdriver, small wire cutters.
|
|
|
|
1. Slide off the battery pack and remove the antenna from the scanner.
|
|
|
|
2. Using a small Phillips screwdriver, remove the two screws from the
|
|
back of the scanner, the two screws which hold the battery retaining spring at
|
|
the base and the spring itself.
|
|
|
|
3. Carefully pry the bottom of the rear cover from the radio and remove
|
|
the cover.
|
|
|
|
4. Locate the two small screws at the base of the circuit board and
|
|
remove them. Gently pull the front panel from the mainframe at the base and
|
|
separate them.
|
|
|
|
5. Locate the (64 pin quad flatpack) microprocessor IC labelled "UNIDEN
|
|
UC-1147" and the 10k ohm (brown-black-orange) leadless resistor positioned
|
|
above the letters "DEN" on the IC.
|
|
|
|
6. Using miniature wire cutters, cut the resistor body in two without
|
|
disturbing anything else near it. If the left solder pad comes loose, it may be
|
|
peeled from the board. Brush or blow away any residue. This completes the
|
|
restoration.
|
|
|
|
REASSEMBLY
|
|
|
|
7. Insert the top of the front panel into the slot under the
|
|
volume/squelch control panel and, noting carefully the alignment of the dual
|
|
inline connector at the bottom of the board with the mating socket, press the
|
|
front panel firmly into place. Be sure that the holes at the bottom of the
|
|
circuit board line up with the holes in the plastic standoffs below them.
|
|
Insert the two screws and gently tighten them.
|
|
|
|
8. Replace the back cover by inserting the top of the cover into the
|
|
slot under the volume/squelch control panel; press the cover into place, insert
|
|
and tighten the screws.
|
|
|
|
9. Reposition the battery retaining spring (slotted side toward notched
|
|
hole), insert the two remaining screws and gently but securely tighten them.
|
|
|
|
10. Slide the battery pack into place; switch the scanner on to make
|
|
sure the display comes on. If not, the battery is discharged or the dual-inline
|
|
connector was misaligned during assembly (see step 7).
|
|
|
|
Assuming the display comes on, press: MANUAL, 845.0, E; within two seconds, the
|
|
frequency 845.000 should appear on the display.
|
|
|
|
Cut this resistor
|
|
|
|
|
V
|
|
[*10k*] [ ]
|
|
|
|
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
|
|
= =
|
|
= =
|
|
= =
|
|
= =
|
|
= U N I D E N =
|
|
= =
|
|
= =
|
|
= =
|
|
= =
|
|
= U C - 1 1 4 7 =
|
|
= =
|
|
= =
|
|
= =
|
|
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
|
|
|
|
|
|
...............................................................................
|
|
|
|
Pete Simpson, KA1AXY SIMPSON_P@MERCURY.CEO.DG.COM
|
|
Data General Corp
|
|
Westboro, MA 01580
|
|
(508) 870-9837 "My company doesn't have anything to
|
|
do with this."
|
|
...............................................................................
|
|
|
|
|
|
that's it.............et.
|
|
--
|
|
Edward Thomas, N2IHN.
|
|
P.O.Box 3233
|
|
Long Branch,NJ. 07740 UUCP: rutgers!petsd!tsdiag!ka2qhd!n2ihn
|