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Amateur (Ham) Radio BS and Callsign Thread!

Discussion in 'Sports, Hobbies & Interests' started by The Traveler, Jan 29, 2013.

  1. Feb 22, 2025 at 10:32 AM
    #9421
    JasonT87

    JasonT87 Well-Known Member

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    Jason
    Southern California
    Vehicle:
    '16 TRD Sport DCSB
    Total Chaos mid-travel front. JD Fab SUA rear.
    As an update to this, I narrowed down my issue to a bad cable. New cable and connectors crimped and we are back in the game. Got my SWRs down to 1.3-1.6 from 150-158 band after tuning my antenna.
    I appreciate everyone’s input. Thank you.
     
    firemaniac and GTGallop like this.
  2. Apr 3, 2025 at 6:18 AM
    #9422
    GTGallop

    GTGallop Well-Known Member

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    Greg
    Anthem, Arizona
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    2023 Magnetic Grey TRD-OR 4x4
    Dash Cams and Hams!
    My honest and brief review of the VERO VGC NR-7500 Mobile Amateur Radio:
    DO NOT BUY! Rather wait for the NR-7600 because they are putting a screen in the hand mic.

    This is a quirky-ass radio. And support via manuals is limited. The only official manual from Vero-Tel is in Mandarin Chinese. All of the other manuals on the web are either a quick start guide or a product sales brochure. I've cobbled together a collection of documents to steer e through learning this odd little radio and they sometimes disagree with each other. My guess is lost in translation or in the difference between the evolving firmware. Most of my formal education on the topic has come from YouTubers.

    Pros:
    Power, sound, fit finish, build quality all rugged.
    Hand Mic is wired (can be bluetooth too if you upgrade) and is much sturdier than other mics I've used and broken and replaced. It also has a fair amount of control buttons on it.
    Mounts out of the way and there is NO screen / control panel to have to mount on the dashboard. This radio uses your phone to control it via BlueTooth.
    Android is a little better control platform than Apple but not a show stopper.
    Potential upgrade..... I'm looking at getting one of the bigger screen / radio control head units for the Taco. Those come with Android on board. Would be nice to have the radio seamlessly integrated with the Infotainment Screen.
    APRS - What a cool feature. It has native APRS inside the radio and will run fine, but it also has a KISS TNC so you can run APRS.fi or APRS Droid. The upshot is you can also run any other phone, tablet, or laptop based radio software through the radio via that same bluetooth TNC. I know some people running WOAD that love it.

    Cons:
    Damn that Mic cord is short - especially for a radio that mounts "out of the way." I guess they really prefer you upgrade to the bluetooth handset. I'm keeping mine until the cord wears out.
    Learning and Programming - not very intuitive.
    Limited Channel Memory - Come on guys. Memory Chips Are CHEEEEEEAP. You could double the memory in this radio for $5 but they don't do it at the factory and there is no way for an end user to pop in an SD Card with additional memory on it.

    You are limited to only 6 banks of channels and each bank has like 32 or 34 channels. The radio does have dual channel ability but you can only operate out of one bank at a time. So if you want to run APRS all of the time and then you have a favorite repeater in each bank, then you have to put APRS as Channel 1 in each bank so it always knows where that is.

    At the end of the day am I happy with this radio? Sorta, yes. Would I recommend it? No. Am I looking to replace it? Also no. Each radio is different and if you switch from Kenwood to iCom or B-Tech then you know how difficult that curve is. This radio does what I need, want, and ask of it. Especially GPS for off roading. It just does it differently and that learning curve is proving to be hard right now. If your mind is still young and flexible, you might take to this radio like a duck to water.

    https://www.verotelecom.com/VERO-VR...obile-Radio-With-APP-Programming-p541441.html

    upload_2025-4-3_6-18-5.jpg
     
    shiftd, trdo-r and BillW like this.
  3. May 7, 2025 at 9:37 AM
    #9423
    Naveronski

    Naveronski Well-Known Member

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    Fort Worth
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    2014 MGM DCSB TRD:OR
    Ailunce HA1G vs Baofeng handhelds?

    I have a couple Baofeng BF-F8HP and UV-5R radios that I’ve had for years. They’re fine and do what I need.

    I recently won a Retevis/Ailunce HA1G in a raffle. I like that it feels more robust and hefty, and has a better screen.

    How does it compare as a radio though? Is it any better than the BF-F8HP? Or should I keep the Baofengs and pass the HA1G along to someone else?
     
  4. May 7, 2025 at 10:16 AM
    #9424
    GarlicFarts

    GarlicFarts Bertolli Roberto

    Joined:
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    Lil Rhody
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    2020 White DCSB TRD OR
    SOS bolt-on sliders In-cab sleeping platform J-Dub IFS Skid
    The baofengs are ham radios, the HA1G is a GMRS radio. It's permitted to TX using the HA1G (with a GMRS license), it is not permitted to TX on GMRS frequencies with the baofengs.

    Otherwise, which do you like better? The Baofengs have a ton of accessories out there for cheap, easy to program, etc.

    For me, the USB C charging out of the box of the HA1G is a big selling point. You can convert a baofeng. It's cheap. But :notsure:

    https://www.amazon.com/Baofeng-UV-5...82&sprefix=baofeng+usb+battery,aps,133&sr=8-3

    I have my ham license, and I use the baofeng for ham radio. I can (technically, I have the ability to, I am not saying I do. :spy: ) use it for GMRS and WX as well. Outside of (receiving only) GMRS and WX (Which the HA1G has), I have not used the baofeng for anything that wasn't ham radio licensed stuff. It can, also, technically, get the MURS channels in there too.

    If you have no need for anything other than GMRS and WX, the HA1G is going to be easier to live with.
     
    Naveronski[QUOTED] likes this.
  5. May 7, 2025 at 2:12 PM
    #9425
    Naveronski

    Naveronski Well-Known Member

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    They all seem to work fine with GMRS frequencies so far. I programmed the Baofengs easily enough. I think I like the HA1G better, but that may be because it's shiny and new. I guess I'll try it out for a bit and see how it goes.
     
  6. May 7, 2025 at 2:41 PM
    #9426
    545

    545 Well-Known Member

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    He’s telling you it’s not legal use the baofengs on gmrs
    This is a ham radio thread, and generally amateur radio people do care about complying
     
    maineah likes this.
  7. May 7, 2025 at 2:53 PM
    #9427
    maineah

    maineah Well-Known Member

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    Tim
    Maine
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    4X4 SR5 V6 6spd
     
  8. May 7, 2025 at 6:25 PM
    #9428
    golfindia

    golfindia Well-Known Member

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    Yes.
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    pickup truck
    The baofengs are dirty on the frequencies they're designed for. You can program them for anything, but they're even dirtier outside of their rated frequencies. If you're using gmrs, at least get a radio type accepted for gmrs, if for no other reason than consideration.
     

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