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Re: [VHFcontesting] Re: 902 vs 903

To: "VHF Contesting" <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
Subject: Re: [VHFcontesting] Re: 902 vs 903
From: "KA6AMD" <ka6amd@earthlink.net>
Date: Thu, 2 Sep 2004 22:43:07 -0700
List-post: <mailto:vhfcontesting@contesting.com>
I originally got my DEM 902 transverter with the 903 MHz crystal. Unfortunately here in the West, the frequency of choice is 902.1. The IF rig I was using was a TR-9000. The crystal sets up so that 903=144 MHz. This means that to use 902.1, I have to go to 143.1. The old TR-9000 was not able to tune below 143.9. So I ended up getting a new crystal.

The point is that almost all 2M multi-mode rigs can go to 145.1 so a transverter crystalled for 902 MHz will work great on 903. Its not necessarily so for the reverse. Just some hard won experience to pass along.

Erich, KA6AMD
DM15bp

----- Original Message ----- From: <dpease@adams.net>
To: "Zack Widup" <w9sz@prairienet.org>
Cc: "VHF Contesting" <vhfcontesting@contesting.com>; "Lee Scott - AA1YN" <aa1yn@aa1yn.com>
Sent: Thursday, September 02, 2004 9:39 AM
Subject: [VHFcontesting] Re: 902 vs 903



Personally, I see advantages to using 145 over 144 for the IF, especially at stations where there are more than one transverter using 2 meters for an IF. I would think you would want the option of using either 902 or 903 simply by changing the IF rig frequency rather than having to change a crystal in the transverter.
Danny NG9R


Zack Widup writes:
On Wed, 1 Sep 2004, Lee Scott - AA1YN wrote:

I've been through the dilemma and started with a 902. The activity in the eastern US is on 903MHz but in the west, it is on 902. There has been a lot of talk (no action) on switching the weak signal calling freq to 902 but it hasn't happened yet. The reason I purchased a 902 rig was that I was using a DSP-10 for the IF which made everything transparent. When my DSP went south a year ago, I bought an FT817 which made 903 on a 902 rig inconvenient as I needed to have the IF at 145MHZ for 903 and 144MHz for 1296. The only difference between the two rigs is a crystal so if you pick up a 903 and later on down the road find you need 902, you just re-crystal the rig. That is what I did to get a 903 rig but I saved the crystal for 902.

When I originally built a 33 cm transverter, I got a crystal for 144 = 902 MHz, then found out that everyone else around here was using 903 MHz. So I got another crystal to make 144 = 903. I may build another transverter with the old crystal for 902 and phase-lock it to a 10 MHz reference for accuracy. With the IF rig I'm using (a modified HTX-100), there's no reason I can't program one of the memories for 145 MHz to get on 903 and just switch memories to change to the higher bands. Zack W9SZ _______________________________________________
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Danny Pease
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