[Lowfer] Lowfer transmissions ?
Facility 406
facility_406 at bruteforcedevelopment.com
Mon Jan 27 15:42:33 EST 2025
Dave Curry used to have transmitter kits as did North Country Radio -
both out of that business now.
I don't think that there has ever been a mobile lowfer transceiver for
voice - it wouldn't make any sense given the need for big antennas for
any efficiency at all.
You would probably be better off with a FRS (460MHz), MURS (160MHz) or
27MHz CB radio, all of which do voice, are available inexpensively, and
most likely would have a much greater range than a voice transceiver for
the lowfer band. (Also, you could get a ham license - just a few
multiple choice questions for an exam).
I recall Curry, used to work near his place. Vaguely recall North
Country Radio. I THINK the Curry model, was a small box, about the size
of a compact CB, white in color, a couple knobs, and a mic, making it
very much CB like in design/style, and could be used as base, or mobile.
The now-XYL and I wanted to play with them for car-to-car, maybe
home-to-home, some 9' whips, and a loading coil for mobile. Efficiency?
We'd be happy with a mile or so, so long as it was "radio".
Some 30 years later, I recall the 1W, but not the antenna restrictions.
Was it 3m like other Part 15 devices?
2m, 220, and 440 was a bit congested in our area at the time, and CB was
getting rough. Played with 10, and 6m. We finally settled on 17m for
simplex chatter, with the occasional person jumping in as we'd run
errands, and meet up for lunch or coffee.
But, yeah, other services are out there, played with CB from the
70's-90's, been a ham, as well as the XYL for a few decades, even ran VE
sessions for years. Jumped into FRS when it was created, MURS as well,
played with 49 MHz, had a GMRS license for a while, on my second
restricted radiotelephone operator permit, one for aircraft, one just to
have, ran a HiFER beacon, looking at 900 MHz SHSS systems now, and
recently heard of IP "walkie talkies"...
What I HAVEN'T played with, or engaged in, is the LowFER voice nets of
decades past, or played with the base/mobile transceivers that were once
available. Might be awesome, might suck, can't say, I missed the boat,
but, should it come around again, I'll try to jump on.
Anyone got a time machine? I'll go back a grab a half-dozen or so of
those old transceivers.
Kurt
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