Showing posts with label digital repeater. Show all posts
Showing posts with label digital repeater. Show all posts

Thursday, December 11, 2025

45th Anniversary of the first 2m digital repeater - Dec 2025


This week marks the 45th anniversary of the first operational packet radio repeater! The repeater went live on the 10th of December 1980 and it operated on a frequency of 146.580 MHz 

The new packet radio repeater was installed by Hank Magnuski, KA6M (now SK) at his home at Menlo Park near San Francisco.

In a report on the new repeater, KA6M wrote... "Since its initial turn-on in December of 1980, the repeater has been transformed from an experiment to a major Bay Area repeater serving a user group now approaching 30 stations. The repeater has been extremely important in testing new hardware and software, and in provoking interest in the area’s amateur community.

From its initial turn-on in December, 1980, and through most of the Spring of 1981 the packet repeater was operating out of my residence in western Menlo Park, California, a location which is in the foothills which border the western shore of the San Francisco Bay. It was an experimental machine then, but could be heard well through most of the northern end of Silicon Valley, even though the power level was modest. The only station equipped to use it then was located in the same house, so there was never any real problem with signal path. 


Since then we have installed a couple of upgrades to the control software, we have used a better CPU card, increased the power level, moved the repeater up to a/00 ft. elevation, and integrated its operation to be 100% compatible with the protocol used by the Vancouver Digital Communications Group’s terminal node controller. The repeater has changed from being a laboratory curiosity to a major Bay Area repeater heard from Marin/Berkeley to south San Jose, and the user community has grown from a couple of stations to a network approaching 30 users. (See the April, 1981, QST for the initial announcement on the machine.)

The KA6M/R repeater is currently operating on a simplex channel assigned (in the San Francisco Bay area) for non-voice use, 146.580 MHz., and transmits data at a speed of 1200 Baud. The machine consists of a Z-80 microprocessor, a Bell 202 compatible modem, and a solid-state transceiver with power amplifier.

The repeater hardware is based on STD bus cards. The STD bus uses 56-pin 4 1/2" x 6 1/2" cards and is very popular. for industrial process control applications. There are now many manufacturers supplying cards for this bus, and the repeater uses the Z-80/CPU-2 card from Mostek, which costs about $195. The STD card is very compact, and does not have unneeded extra circuitry which is typically found on more versatile personal system CPU cards. A WD1933 chip was breadboarded onto a Vector STD board, and one additional card to control the transmitter is all that was required.

A Bell 202 modem uses a mark tone of 1200 Hz., and a space tone of 2200 Hz. The modulation is AFSK-FM using unmodified voice-frequency radio equipment."

From those humble beginnings packet radio would go on to become hugely popular with radio amateurs in the 80's and 90's. It was of course when most people didn't have access to the Internet yet at home and packet gave rise to bulletin boards and dx-clusters all over the radio.

In the late 90's, packet radio waned as more and more people got on the Internet with much higher speeds and a huge variety of content. Packet radio on 2m today is used primarily for APRS - Automatic Position Reporting System.

Links...

1) Internet Archive - ON THE CARE AND FEEDING OF YOUR PACKET REPEATER by Hank Magnuski, KA6M

2) Pacific Packet Radio Society

Sunday, March 14, 2021

EI2PMD - New Digital Gateway on 2m in Dublin


Update 14th March 2021: The new digital gateway in Dublin can now cater for DMR and D-Star modes.

IRTS News... New Multi-mode Digital Gateway, EI2PMD, Portmarnock, North Dublin

Ger, EI4HOB is pleased to report that the new Multi-Mode Digital Gateway, EI2PMD, located in Portmarnock, North Dublin, is now fully operational. The Gateway operates DMR, C4FM and D-Star on 144.825 MHz with a wide coverage of Dublin from the Northside down to the Tallaght and Dún Laoghaire areas. The DMR operates on Time Slot 2 and Colour Code 2. DMR Defaults to TG 2724, C4FM to IE-YSF-Ireland and D-Star to DCS 049 I. The Gateway operates 25 watts of power into a vertical colinear antenna. This gateway will provide a much needed digital service for the Dublin area. Good coverage reports have been received to date as borne out by the coverage maps.

* * *

Original post 22nd Jan 2021...In the last few days, a new Yaesu C4FM Digital Gateway for the Dublin area went on air.

Steve EI5DD writes..."A new C4FM Wires-X Gateway, EI2PMD, located in Portmarnock, Dublin, became active today (19th Jan 2021). The Gateway is operating on 144.825MHz and is linked to the CQ-IRELAND Room along with systems from Galway, Limerick, and Northern Ireland. YSF-Ireland, DMR TG 2724, and the Peanut App. We congratulate Ger EI4HOB for placing the first Digital system on air in the Dublin area."

As amateur radio digital repeaters and gateways have popped up around Ireland over the last few years, the one obvious omission was a digital repeater/gateway near the capital Dublin. This is in marked contrast to what usually happens with any new technology in that it usually starts near the capital or main city of a country and then spread outwards.

The new digital gateway is located in Portmarnock in the north side of Dublin City and it uses the 2m frequency of 144.825 MHz.

The approximate coverage is shown below...


From what I understand, the RF part of the gateway is confined to those using YAESU C4FM digital radios at present. It is hoped that in time, it will become a multimode gateway allowing DMR operation.

The gateway runs 20 watts into a Diamond omni-directional antenna.

Well done to EI4HOB and the North Dublin Radio Club for getting project up and running.