Bill Ruttan
Member
Has anyone tried to mount a Back Country Access “BCA Link” FRS Radio to the rain gutter of a vehicle and then run the wire for its combination speaker/mic/control to the inside?
Just trying to think of a legal way to gain the benefits of an antenna external to the vehicle under FRS rules. I am still missing my old Radio Shack ‘2150’ (?) FRS Radio that cleverly put everything (except the speaker/mic and radio controls) in a mag-mount pod on the car roof😊Tell me more about your objective?
Yes, but that doesn’t help the “unlicensed masses” who would like to get better performance (through use of an exterior antenna) when using FRS radios inside their vehicles.Good reason to go to 2M with your FCC license.
That's exactly why GMRS exists.Yes, but that doesn’t help the “unlicensed masses” who would like to get better performance (through use of an exterior antenna) when using FRS radios inside their vehicles.
All true about GMRS and ham, but, back in the day, Radio Shack certainly found a market for their ‘plug and play’ 21-1850That's exactly why GMRS exists.
FRS and GMRS interoperate on the same frequencies but when you go to an external antenna, wider bandwidth and more power the FCC likes to know so they can have some chance at minimizing interference. If you want to do more elaborate things you can step up to ham. It's taken a few decades and it's not perfect but ther are tiers that allow a fairly reasonable level of technology commiserate with your licensing level.
You can have your immediate family use GMRS under your license (and presumed knowledge) and other people just have to deal with their own things.
That RS radio adhered to the letter of the rule having a non-detachable antenna but it was clever in making the form factor work for mobile, which was skirting the FCC's intention. There was some question during the type acceptance (FCC ID AAO2101850) about it and the FCC initially rejected it. That was way back 23 years ago now!All true about GMRS and ham, but, back in the day, Radio Shack certainly found a market for their ‘plug and play’
vehicle mounted radios (even though such a FRS transmitter was then restricted to 25% of the current power limit)!
Indeed, the Midland MXT275 GMRS is about as close to a “plug-and-play” radio as you can get today (and is the model I have purchased for my next vehicle).That RS radio adhered to the letter of the rule having a non-detachable antenna but it was clever in making the form factor work for mobile, which was skirting the FCC's intention. There was some question during the type acceptance about it and the FCC initially rejected it. That was way back 23 years ago now!
The 1/2 watt limit is still true on channels 8 to 14. But that's also the GMRS limit on those shared channels.
Although I'm not sure how much of a market it found since it never sold in big numbers. Also, Radio Shack went bankrupt and is gone now. It was down to just you and me shopping there at the end.
It would be about $140 in 2023. It was $79.99 in the 2002 catalog. You can get a Midland MXT275 GMRS mobile and antenna package for $165 now and that's gets you 15 watts, 22 channels, NOAA NWS radio and the option to use a different antenna (or replace it when it breaks, which was the problem with the 21-1850).
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No, I am a simple voice😊Are you rather looking at pumping modulated DATA through this? Not simply voice?