Member III
Right on! See you thereI'll wait for you at the Sherman exit Mobil station. Blue Explorer with a light bar on top. Can't wait!
Member III
Right on! See you thereI'll wait for you at the Sherman exit Mobil station. Blue Explorer with a light bar on top. Can't wait!
Member III
Excellent! I'll be on channel 4 on the GMRS as soon I leave work. See ya at Applebees!Looks like we should be good to go for the Applebees meeting point. Just have to make sure we are packed up and ready. I have CB and GMRS (3 if others need one). See ya there.
Member III
Off-Road Ranger I
Member III
Awesome! Glad you made it back safely. I had a great time. Thanks again for coming, I'm looking forward to the next one.I'm checking on here, we just got back to the cabin via the IDBR section from Wallace to Pierce. It dawned on me I don't have cell service up here, so at least @Aaron Niemi and @Paul Daniels,l know Sasquatch didn't get us! Great trip , Aaron, and loved meeting up with the whole crew.
Member III
The whole spectrum... I'm only running GMRS Currently, but I'll be putting in a CB soon. @britz I think is running HAM and CB, Paul is running CB, @Sandpoint Steve is running HAM. @Captain Chaos is running CB & HAM, @chuckoverland is running GMRS... Anyone correct me if I'm wrong. So it's a mixed bag, but I don't think I've ever had a time where someone wasn't able to communicate in one way or another, either passing out spare radios, or relaying from CB to GMRS.Maybe this is a good place to ask: what types of radios are folks in the Eastern Wa, idaho area running on these types of trips?
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Boy, what a pain in the butt. It is too bad there is not a settled platform. In the old days everyone would be on CB, not the best technology perhaps, but at least everyone was there. Seems nearly unavoidable to have to run more than one kind of radio. As a boater used to being able to grab the VHF and expect to be able to talk to nearly any other boat, this soup of radio formats is dissappointing. I wish someone made a radio that would roll from VHF to CB to SSB to HAM. Might need more than one antenna, but it seems like it should be doable.The whole spectrum... I'm only running GMRS Currently, but I'll be putting in a CB soon. @britz I think is running HAM and CB, Paul is running CB, @Sandpoint Steve is running HAM. @Captain Chaos is running CB & HAM, @chuckoverland is running GMRS... Anyone correct me if I'm wrong. So it's a mixed bag, but I don't think I've ever had a time where someone wasn't able to communicate in one way or another, either passing out spare radios, or relaying from CB to GMRS.
-Aaron
Member III
I think it's more of a legal/licensing issue, since you have to have different permits for HAM vs GMRS or none for CB. Also, I think you can pickup most frequencies with HAM but you're not permitted to transmit since you're overpower (I think that's why, anyways, but I don't have my HAM license so it could be BS). Eventually, I'll get my HAM license but I'm just getting started so GMRS seemed to be the most bang for the buck. CB next, then HAM.Boy, what a pain in the butt. It is too bad there is not a settled platform. In the old days everyone would be on CB, not the best technology perhaps, but at least everyone was there. Seems nearly unavoidable to have to run more than one kind of radio. As a boater used to being able to grab the VHF and expect to be able to talk to nearly any other boat, this soup of radio formats is dissappointing. I wish someone made a radio that would roll from VHF to CB to SSB to HAM. Might need more than one antenna, but it seems like it should be doable.
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Off-Road Ranger I
Good info. Thanks.The only reason I have CB is because I live and ride in logging territory, you NEED to know when and where those trucks are rolling. I've had Ham because it has the best chance of getting out over steep mountain terrain, and at 15 dollars for a 10 year license, it's way cheaper than GMRS.
I don't know about GMRS, but we can get IDL, law enforcement, first responder channels, etc., in case of wildfires, emergencies, and such. Being that my boyfriend and I are volunteer fire, and living in the woods, this has proven invaluable every year.
We do have some of those FRS radios, but the CB and Ham get used constantly, even for spotting on trails. The guys on this trip were the first that I ran into using GMRS.