The thoughts in this article are that of my own, and do not necessarily represent those of the GBMK. I'll admit to having a digital interest/bias.
The Green Bay Mike & Key Club is at an equipment crossroads. The 147.12 and 147.36 are nearing the end of their 30 year life. They both do need upgrading, and I'm sure many doubt this.
But it seems there is more to it than that. It's more a question of where will ham radio be in another 10, 20 and 30 years? More importantly, where do you the members and hams of the area want and envision it to be?
I also feel that there is little doubt that the GBMK is the prominent club/voice for ham radio in this area. The community infrastructure they decide and provide for the area ham populous does in effect impact the future of ham radio in this area.
My personal feeling is that one of the three systems the Green Bay Mike & Club maintains should be able to do something more that it has for the last 30 years. I feel strongly that one of these systems should at least be "digital ready," meaning that the hardware can support or be upgraded to support some digital format.
Weather that be D-Star, APCO-25, NXDN, or something else is for members to decide.
All I know is locking the community into another 30 years of the same capabilities doesn't sound very smart for the future of the hobby.
73'
Steve, KB9MWR
Unfortunately it fell upon deaf ears. I did receive a couple notes from people who seemed to agree or thought it was a good point/well written.
The club chose replace the 147.360 Micor with a Kenwood analog radio. When put on the spot, the reason for not considering digital was because there wasn't enough of a potential user base. Hardly any members had digital capabilities. That coupled with the question of which digital format would take over and not wanting to invest in the wrong thing.
While I can understand the reasoning. The door swings both ways. Most hams won't take the plunge and buy a new radio without infrastructure in the area. Which is also understandable.
Trying to be good spirited I even helped with a tune-up when the new repeater was moved to the Bellin hospital site. For a few weeks the excitement was high, and there was a lot of use of the new system.
So lets look at it now:
During the month of October I logged the transmitter activity on the 147.360. On average it saw less than 1 hr of total transmitter time daily.
So to me the argument that a digital counter part was not warranted due to potential use has been invalidated.
I guess the core issue here is in generating and keeping interest in the hobby. It also seems wise to not duplicate resources, but instead try something different.
For instance there are about analog 10 repeaters in Green Bay. How many hams per day do you think get on all these machines?
So I don't see how a narrow band push is logical, for the sole purpose to accommodate everyone's request to put up a repeater.
Just my $.02
2 comments:
There is a push for the Fox Cities Amateur Radio Club to replace the 443.650 repeater with a D Star repeater. Although we are looking for people who plan on using it to donate some money towards the project.
I foresee this happening within the next year or two. So there is a slight push for a digital repeater in the Green Bay/Appleton area.
73 de KC9FSH
Thanks for the info Tim.
I bumped into a couple hams at Appleton Hamfest. From that I realized it would be advantageous to try identify all the hams north of Milwaukee interested in D-Star. I created a discussion on the WI Ham Radio Operators Facebook group to try and solicit.
As mentioned in my email we have a homebrew UHF D-Star repeater operational here in Green Bay.
More info on the ATC/N9DKH fan page:
http://www.facebook.com/topic.php?uid=74866162213&topic=9462
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