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A cross band repeater is similar in function to a standard repeater
in that it contains a receiver and a transmitter that are linked
together, but which operate on different frequencies. Voice signals that
the repeater receives on its input frequency are automatically
retransmitted on its output frequency. A repeater is a relay station.
A cross band repeater is implemented using a dual band 2 meter - 70
cm radio. The repeater receives signals on one amateur radio band (for
example 70 cm) and retransmits those signals on a second amateur band (2
meters). Thus the name cross band repeater.
A cross band repeater is far less expensive than a conventional
repeater. A conventional repeater can cost several thousand dollars. It
is expensive because it operates on a single frequency band, 2 meters
for example. As a result, its transmit and receive frequencies are only
separated by a few hundred KHz. (600 KHz. on 2 meters). This close
frequency spacing requires the receive section of the repeater to have
extremely narrow filters that are quite expensive. The narrow filters
are needed so that the repeater can continue to receive on its input
frequency (for example 147.285 MHz) while transmitting on its output
frequency (147.885 MHz). If it were not for these expensive filters, the
repeater's receive section would be immediately overloaded by its own
transmitter, as soon as it began to transmit. Once overloading occurs,
the repeater can no longer receive input signals and thus ceases to
operate as a relay station.
The cost of a repeater drops significantly if its input and output
frequencies are separated by several hundred MHz instead of a few
hundred KHz.. With a wide spacing between the input and output
frequencies, expensive input filters are no longer required. The
frequency spacing between the 2 meter (147 MHz) amateur radio band and
the 70 cm (447 MHz) band is 300 MHz. With this wide spacing, the
standard low cost input filters on a 70 cm radio will prevent the
receive section of the radio from being overloaded by a close 2 meter
transmitter and visa versa. Manufacturers of dual band 2 meter - 70 cm
mobile transceivers quickly picked up on this fact and added cross band
repeating functions to their radios. When in the cross band
repeating mode, a signal received on 70 cm is retransmitted on 2 meters.
Likewise, a signal received on 2 meters is retransmitted on 70 cm.
Generally, however, a transceiver can only transmit on one frequency at
a time. Thus if signals are received on both 2 meters and 70 cm, the
signal heard first is the only one retransmitted.
As mentioned above, a cross band repeater is an effective way to
expand the range of a handheld radio. The following example illustrates
this point. CVARC provided radio communications support during a recent
CROP Walk sponsored by Thousand Oaks area churches. The base station for
the radio net was located at Nygreen Hall on the California Lutheran
University (CLU) campus, the start and finish point for the walk. Two
rest stops with water for the walkers were set up along the course. A
CVARC radio operator was placed at each rest stop to provide
communications from the rest stop back to Nygreen Hall. In addition, two
mobile radio units drove along the course looking for people who needed
help and also providing the rest stops with additional supplies (water
and cups) as needed. Two meter simplex radio communications was used to
avoid tying up the local Thousand Oaks repeaters. A handheld radio was
used at Rest Stop 1 on the corner of Moorpark and Janss roads since
there was not room on this street corner to set up a portable radio
station and antenna. The hills between Rest Stop 1 and Nygreen Hall,
combined with the handheld's low power and inefficient antenna, made
radio communications between the two locations impossible. To over come
this problem, a car with a dual band radio configured for cross band
repeating was parked across the street from Rest Stop 1 in the
McDonnalds parking lot. By using the cross band repeater, Rest Stop 1
could easily communicate with Nygreen Hall, Rest Stop 2, and the two
radio equipped mobile units. The handheld at Rest Stop 1 communicated
with the car on 70 cm and from the car to the 2 meter simplex net via
cross band repeating.
In the more general case, shown in Figure 1, the vehicle containing
the cross band repeater is parked on a hill to provide communications
between net control and handheld units that can not reach net control
because of distance, terrain, or both. One important observation is that
people with handhelds can not only talk with net control via the cross
band repeater, they can also communicate with each other. This
capability is particularly usefully for Boy Scout troops, hikers, and
search and rescue missions. People with dual band 2 meter - 70 cm
handheld radios, capable of receiving on both bands simultaneously, can
hear everyone on the net. Anyone anywhere on the net transmitting on 2
meters will be picked up by the cross band repeater and retransmitted on
70 cm. A person with a dual band handheld will receive the transmission
on either 2 meters, or 70 cm, or both. Likewise, someone anywhere on the
net transmitting on 70 cm will be picked up by the cross band repeater
and retransmitted on 2 meters. A person with a dual band handheld will
receive the transmission on ether 70 cm, or 2 meters, or both. People
with single band 2 meter or 70 cm radios will not have quite as good
coverage. Those with single band 70 cm radios can hear everyone who is
transmitting on 2 meters since everything that the cross band repeater
hears on 2 meters will be retransmitted on 70 cm. However, if a handheld
person transmits on 70 cm, the cross band repeater will retransmit on 2
meters. Others with only 70 cm capability of course can not hear the 2
meter transmission. They will hear the 70 cm transmission only if they
are in line of site with the person transmitting on 70 cm. A similar
situation occurs if single band 2 meter handheld radios are used. In
this case, the 2 meter handheld people can hear, via the cross band
repeater, everything that is transmitted on 70 cm and those 2 meter
transmissions which are in their line of sight. Obviously, the best
situation is to use dual band handheld radios since people with th ese
radios can hear everything that is transmitted on the net.
Cross band repeating works best in simplex networks. Cross band
repeating can be using on a standard repeater network, as shown in
Figure 2, however, if this is done, more discipline is required by those
operating on the net. The problem is that the cross band repeater will
not switch into the 70 cm receive mode until after the carrier of the
main 2 meter repeater has dropped. This makes the turn around times on
the net (the time between the last person speaking and the next person
beginning) abnormally long. If people on the main 2 meter net begin
talking before the repeater carrier has dropped, the people with 70 cm
handheld radios will rarely get a chance to speak. To provide for
fairness on the net, anyone wishing to speak must wait until the
repeater carrier has dropped before beginning to talk.