Title: Introduction to Repeaters
1Introduction to Repeaters
- Ron Milione, Ph.D. CETma
- W2TAP
- w2tap_at_arrl.org
- ron.p.milione.ctr_at_us.army.mil
2What is a repeater?
- A repeater is a device that performs 3 basic
functions - It receives and demodulates an RF signal.
- It regenerates the audio information.
- It modulates and retransmits the audio on a new
RF carrier.
3Some History
- Amateurs experimenting with VHF/UHF in the 1930s
discovered that propagation was generally limited
to line-of-sight. - The limited working range offset the advantages
of VHF gear for mobile/portable operation (small
antennas and light equipment) - In the 1950s, widespread availability of WWII
surplus electronics led to the creation of the
first repeaters on the West Coast. - The repeaters were AM and used frequencies on the
2 meter band. - By the 1970s, standard offsets and FM were
introduced.
4Basic Repeater Components
5Basic Repeater Block Diagram
6Antenna
- Repeater antennas are almost always vertically
polarized and have an omnidirectional azimuth
pattern. - Generally the same antenna is used for
transmitting and receiving. - The antenna is mounted as high as possible in
order to have good line-of-sight coverage.
7Duplexer
- A duplexer is a special type of filter that
allows a single antenna to transmit and receive
simultaneously on two closely spaced frequencies. - A typical duplexer consists of two pairs of
resonant cavities. - Two pass the transmit signal from the transmitter
to the antenna while rejecting the received
power. - The other two pass the receive signal from the
antenna to the receiver while rejecting
transmitted power. - Typical rejection is better than 70 dB, while
attenuating the desired signal less than 2 dB
8Duplexer Diagram
9Duplexer OperationReceived Signals
10Duplexer OperationTransmitted Signals
11Receiver
- A repeater receiver must have good sensitivity
and excellent selectivity, in order to have
adequate rejection of the transmitted signal. - The receiver will have at least two outputs
- Audio output
- Carrier detect
- The audio output can contain both audio signals
and out-of-band control tones. - A signal appears on the carrier detect line when
an RF carrier breaks the receivers squelch. (a
repeater use requests service)
12Carrier Operated Relay
- The carrier operated relay turns on the
transmitter in response to - a carrier detect signal
- an ID transmit signal
13Transmitter
- The transmitter should meet the following
criteria - High spectral purity (to avoid unnecessary
receiver interference) - Highest possible output power (for greatest
coverage)
14ID Timer
- The ID timer performs basic ID housekeeping
tasks - Generating appropriate IDs
- Tracking time between ID transmissions
15Repeater Simulation
16Important Upgrades
17External Control
- The control operator (repeater trustee or his
designee) needs to be able to control the
operation of the repeater transmitter, in the
event of - Electrical malfunction
- Inappropriate use of the repeater
- To implement the external control function as
well as some other desirable features, the
carrier operated relay is generally replaced by a
repeater controller
18Repeater Controller
- A repeater controller provides (at least) the
following capabilities - Telephone line interface
- Voice ID and announcement capability
- Linking
- Transmitter controls
- Special supervisory tones (courtesy beep, etc.)
- DTMF decoding
- CTCSS decoding
19Types of External Control
- Via telephone
- The repeater operation is controlled through DTMF
tone groups sent through a phone line. - Via RF link
- The repeater controller is accessed via a
separate simplex RF link (above 222.15 MHz) - On-the-Air
- DTMF tones sent into the repeater are used to
control its operation.
20Autopatch
- An autopatch is a connection between an amateur
repeater and the PSTN that permits a repeater
user to make a phone call from his/her radio,
provided that the radio has DTMF capability. - The call made through the autopatch is subject to
all the restrictions of an amateur transmission. - The popularity and utility of of autopatch has
declined significantly with the advent of cell
phones.
21Reverse Autopatch
- A reverse autopatch is a connection from the PSTN
to an amateur station through a repeater. - The call is originated by the PSTN subscriber,
not the mobile amateur. - The originator of the call should be an amateur
the call will be carried on amateur frequencies - Once again, the restrictions on amateur
transmissions apply to these communications.
22Implementing Autopatch
- All modern repeater controllers have an autopatch
capability. All that is required is a connection
between the phone line and the controller. - Cell phones may also be used to provide a line
for autopatch. If the line will also be used to
control the repeater, an older AMPS cell phone is
necessary.
23CTCSS
- CTCSS is the continuous tone coded squelch
system - A repeater using CTCSS will cannot be accessed
unless a user transmits a subaudible tone with
his audio information.
24CTCSS Tones
67.0 69.3 71.9 74.4
77.0 79.7 82.5 85.4
88.5 91.5 94.8 97.4
100 103.5 107.2 110.9
114.8 118.8 123.0 127.3
131.8 136.5 141.3 146.2
151.4 156.7 162.2 167.9
173.8 179.9 186.2 192.8
203.5 206.5 210.7 218.1
225.7 229.1 233.6 241.8
250.3 254.1
25W2VL Repeater Block Diagram
26Repeater Linking
27Repeater Linking
- Repeaters may be linked to increase the coverage
available to the users. - Linking methods
- Internet ilink, etc.
- Telephone line
- VHF/UHF link between repeaters (remote base
linking)
28Internet Repeater Linking
- This type of linking uses VoIP (Voice over
Internet Protocol) to connect repeaters via the
Internet. - The repeater is connected to the Internet via a
PC running software such as Ilink, Echolink,
IRLP/Speak Freely - The software provides A/D conversion and
compression for the audio and transceiver
control. - The repeater may be accessed from the Internet by
users who have VoIP capability
29Telephone Linking
- Uses a dial-up link to connect two repeaters.
- Primary repeaters controller makes an autopatch
call to the secondary repeater. - The secondary repeaters controller answers the
call and goes into reverse autopatch mode. - This type of linking is full duplex
30Remote Base Linking
- A separate RF link is installed between the
primary and secondary repeaters. - FCC rules require that this link operate above
222.15 MHz - When the primary repeater is opened, its
controller routes audio to the RF link
transceiver and puts it into transmit mode. - When the secondary repeaters RF link transceiver
receives a signal, this signal is sent to its
controller, which retransmits the signal over the
secondary repeater. - This type of linking is half-duplex (simplex)
31Remote Base Linking
32Some Notes on Repeater Operation
- All transmission over a repeater should be in
accordance with FCC Rules. - Amateurs have no right to operate on a
repeater. The repeater or his/her designee grants
operating privileges to amateurs. - Wait for the courtesy tone!!!!
- The repeater should not be tied up by long
conversations use a simplex frequency for a
long QSO.
33Useful DTMF Commands for the a Repeater as an
example
Macro Command / Message Macro Command / Message
ltautodialgt Patch Autodial 410 Morning Net
Patch Down 411 Evening Net
026 Time (male voice) 420 Skywarn Net
027 Time (female voice) 425 Meeting Week
029 Date 426 Meeting Tonight
400 Repeater Off 427 Breakfast
401 Repeater On 430 Outside Temperature
406 Patch Disable 431 Rack Temperature
34Closing Comments
- FM Repeater operation is often the first type a
new amateur attempts, and is the main mode for
many amateurs - All repeater users should be polite, courteous
and helpful to newcomers/visitors - The W2VL repeater is flagship repeater of LIMARC
- 146.850- W2VL 1288.00-
- 147.375 W2KPQ 224.820-
- 449.125- W2KPQ
- PL for all is 136.5