As said, only use these in the bush and with a printed frequency list. Using radios in town is not a good idea. You can also monitor communications on some channels like Roads if stuck in traffic on the highway, but transmitting on their frequencies is not good at all. My radios are for emergency use and communicating in remote areas. Just be careful and respectful, these are not toys.
If you want to use them as a hobby get your license.
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If you want to transmit at all, get a license. The only reason you should be transmitting without one is an emergency.
What are some of the best affordable 2-way radios for hunting wooded areas?
Picked up a set of Motorola 2 chan 5 Watt VHF radios, batteries, chargers, ,chest packs, lapel mics for 200.00
Simple and much better than the Baofengs in terms of tx rx in rough terrain. Unbeatable 10 mile LOS range, and in thick bush/mountains no repeater 2.3 miles.
Another thing to consider is 8W is a lot of power to radiate close to your head.
cellphones output a less than 3W and some boffins think it's dangerous.
These threads pop up ( what radio to use ) a couple or three times a season.
Sometimes at the beginning or at the end.
Anyways, I recall I posted an amateur radio operator set up they used at their deer camp.
Consisted of a portable repeater and the radios they used.
Costs a few dollars to build , but if you are thrifty enough one can source the parts and assemble ones self.
Have fun, be safe and Tight Groups,
Rob
Radiowaves are non ionizing radiation. There is zero scientific evidence that cell phones increase risk of cancer, the radiation emitted isn't energetic enough to do damage on the cellular (as in brain cells ect) level.
There was at least one study that linked cell phones and cancer risk, but scientists have been unable to replicate the results in future studies so it is now assumed the first study was flawed in some way.
GMRS only certain frequencies and no more than 2 watts ERP. You'd have to program the radio to only work on a few channels. In the case of those UV5R, they don't have a 2 watt setting.
We use Motorola's at work, what model are you using? We are running ours at 5 watts and using a 25 watt base station. Of course, we are licensed for the frequencies we use. This would be a good solution as I suspect the 2 channels are public channels. No license required.
Nice. Those old Motorola radios are tanks. I'd bet they last another 20 years. The size of the handhelds is probably the number one complaint I hear. Did you program them yourself?
What are you using as a base radio? We just replaced our Quantars after 20 years in service. I'd love to get my hands on one of those. That would make an awesome camp radio. We run them at 25 watts too.
Motorola makes very good hardware. The older stuff seems to be indestrucable. The biggest issues we have are battery contacts wearing and user damage from dropping them.
If you watch crown assets in the coming months you'll probably see some Quantars up there. I did a search today and it looks like Fisheries and Oceans just dumped some XTS-3000's in VHF bands. A person would need access to Motorola's software and programming equipment to set them up.
I did a quick search and it seems the HT600s can be found for great prices on eBay. How do the batteries hold up?
These threads pop up ( what radio to use ) a couple or three times a season.
Sometimes at the beginning or at the end.
Anyways, I recall I posted an amateur radio operator set up they used at their deer camp.
Consisted of a portable repeater and the radios they used.
Costs a few dollars to build , but if you are thrifty enough one can source the parts and assemble ones self.
Have fun, be safe and Tight Groups,
Rob