Home > ham-radio > Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver
10 Apr

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver

Posted by Comments off

The two meter and seventy cm ham radio bands are the most general of all of the ham radio bands and it is where most new hams begin out. The two meter band is a VHF or very high frequency band and the seventy cm band is a UHF or Ultra high frequency band.

Upon obtaining an novice radio license or “ticket” in general a hams initial investment is in a dual-band hand held two way radio, often times referred to as an HT or Handy talkie, a term which formulated from the old term: walkie-talkie. Customarily the novice radio operators second investment is in a mobile dual band UHF/VHF transceiver or “rig” which they mount in their vehicle or radio Shack. These two rigs have very similar functionality but the hand held battery-operated rig is ordinarily fixed to a greatest or most complete or best possible output power of when it comes to 5 watts. The mobile radio which is connected to the vehicles twelve Volt power supply, or if it used as a base station, to a transformer supplying 12 Volts DC and is competent of transmitting in general up to with regards to 35 watts.

UHF and VHF frequencies are line of sight. Depending on the power output and the emplacement of the transmission aerial UHF and VHF transmissions are capable to reach the visible horizon and perhaps just a little beyond, but that is the limit. There is one noteworthy exception to this rule which is Tropospheric ducting, where under very strange and rather rare weather conditions VHF and UHF radio signals travel very much further than the horizon. novice radio operators take vantage of this phenomena when it does occur by communication with other hams over outstanding distances.

A 5 Watt Handy-talkie will have an operative range “depending on the terrain and elevation” of roughly 3 miles. A mobile rig on full power with a good antenna in a good emplacement will in all probability have a greatest or most complete or best possible range of fifteen to twenty miles under favorable conditions. To get over this limitation in range novice radio operators make use of radio repeaters, which are often owned and operated by novice radio clubs, but some are privately owned. These radio repeaters are automatic transceivers that listen or receive on one frequency and transmit on a dissimilar frequency, this is oftentimes referred to as “the split”. The radio repeater takes the signal that it receives on the input frequency and instantaneously retransmits it on the output frequency using a lot more power, in general in regards to a hundred Watts. In addition to the higher power most of these radio repeaters aerials are located on the top of very high towers or high buildings which genuinely increments it’s range.

A ham’s Handy talkie may be employed to transmit on the repeater’s input frequency and receive on the repeater’s output frequency efficaciously increasing the range of the hand kept rig to just beyond the horizon, perhaps even as far as thirty or forty miles. Many radio repeater schemes have various receiving aerials located all around the repeater’s coverage area but just one main transmitter. In this way a big city may be exclusively covered with a radio repeater scheme with hams being capable to receive the radio repeater just in regards to anyplace in the city and they are capable to be received by the radio repeater or “hit the radio repeater” as it is in general referred to, again from closely anyplace in the city.

Recently a heap of repeaters around the globe have been connected to the World wide web and may be linked to each other using the World-wide-web. For example an ham radio operator in Moscow Russia with an Handy-talkie may chat through their local repeater with a fellow novice who is driving in their car in New York city United States.

Some radio repeater systems are continually linked to each other but most are linked as and when required by the user and the link is dropped at the end of the conversation.

Most novice repeaters are open to all licensed ham radio operators at no cost. These radio repeaters do take cash to buy, operate and maintain. They are normally financed by club membership dues and events kept by the club like Hamfests. If a ham finds themselves using a radio repeater often then perchance they must actually consider joining the club that owns the repeater and support to finance it.

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver

The Icom IC-2200H is a 2m FM mobile transceiver. It has a switchable amber or green alphanumeric LCD display, and features AM RX, CTCSS tone encode/decode/scan, DTCS paging/squelch, 24 DTMF autodial memories, extended receive, 207 memory channels, pocket beep, multiple scan modes, weather channel with alert, and more. The optional UT-118 digital unit provides digitally modulated and demodulated clear voice and data communications at 4.8 kbps. The radio is supplied with a fused DC power cord, mobile bracket with hardware and a backlit DTMF hand microphone with up and down frequency controls and programming buttons.

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver Pic

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver Image

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver Image

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver

Limited Magnum Meter Mobile Transceiver Photo


Ham Radio
Hello Folks,

This is a Amateur Radio (Ham) and requires testing and a license to operate.
It is also much for less at Ham Radio web stores.

Now, regarding the radio. This is a slight upgrade from the IC2100H, and the two I had were rock solid!

Great Replacement for an Icom IC-2100H
Like all of the Icom merchandise made in the last 8-10 years, this one has been a alternate for a flawed unit. The IC-2200H replaces the IC-2100H. The 2100 had a transistor that got too hot and would not grant power setting changes to be made. Icom blamed the client for using the faulty antenna or detrimental the instrumentation even when they did not one thing to it. The 2200 fixed the problem and added some features. The “H” was a modify due to a problem with the handset, which was fixed or replaced.

I give this radio only 4 stars due to this. 2100′s and 2200′s are outstanding radios and pack a lot of utile features, and at a low price. But be cautious, Icom hires engineers that have no clue and tend to need a great deal of work out of the box to be reliable. The mutual thread from Icom, it is your fault, either recompense us for the fix (of our engineering problem), or buy this newer model.

The VHF Marine radios, IC-M602 had little or no RF shielding and the response was to “buy an IC-M604). The PCR-1000 could be modded to listen cell phones (analog), and the response was, “buy a PCR-1500″. Predator drones with PCR-1000′s had other issues, and the response was “buy a PCR-2500″. My response, “why ought to I buy another Icom”?

As for the IC-2200H, this is a outstanding radio and will work well, but be sure to test all features and do a burn in test right after purchase. It is a outstanding entry level radio, or committed digital DarkStar radio. Or better yet, buy something that says: “Motorola”, “Vertex/Yaesu/Standard”, or “Kenwood” on it.

Amateur Radio License Required with this product
Great radio and galore features for the 2 meter Amateur Radio operator. As always a great price through Amazon.
This is my bestloved 2 meter radio.. Remember you need a license from the FCC to operate this license, Ham’s do
report unlicensed operation to FCC (as I have done). If you would like to obtain a FCC Amateur License for the
Amateur Radio Service (Ham Radio) Check the ARRL web site [...] underneath licensing..tests are given frequently
and the costs are very low. Dean K4DSB

Comments are closed.