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- This Week in Amateur Radio
- via Amateur Radio Daily: Yaesu, Icom & Kenwood Feature New Transceivers at Ham Fair Japan
JVC Kenwood exhibits a new 144/430MHz car transceiver under development
Blast from the Past β WordStar 7.0 Archive
Blast from the Past β WordStar 7.0 Archive
Modern Amateur Radio Hobby β An Introduction
New to Amateur Radio? What is a Repeater?
Modern Amateur Radio Hobby β An Introduction
Troubles with the ID51
I wanted to get a programmer for the ID51. So, off to RT Systems as I have some of their programmers already. Got the Mac version of the package for the ID51 but it does not allow programming via SD card. That caught me out because their package for the FT2D does and I wrongly assumed this would too.
Of course, it needs a cable! Off to eBay⦠an allegedly suitable cable arrived today but the RT Systems program will not find it. Typical, it needs one of their enfangled cables that are incompatible with the rest of the world. No way that will arrive in time for our trip.
Soβ¦ Chirp then. Downloaded the Mac version but it, too will not see the eBay cable. I know the Mac sees it so why wonβt the software? RT Systems has no option to select a USB port, Chirp does but offers no help as to what it is.
Try Linux? Hmmmβ¦Β Iβm really not into fiddling with flatpack or any other enfangled package managers β apt is enough, no apt, no use.
Windows then! Got Chirp, and it can find the cable, and Chirp will see it and will download from the ID51. All good then? Nope!
This exercise was to enable me to program up all the foreign repeaters ready for the trip and also to figure out why our local repeater was in the list incorrectly. So letβs take a step backwards nowβ¦
I had tried to update the list of repeaters by downloading from Icom. This method works fine by loading the relevant file onto an SD card and telling the radio to load it. RT Systems take note β why does your FT2D software allow this but the ID51 software does not? This should be standard!
But the resultant list was missing the local repeater. I tried to add it but then the radio tells me there are no repeaters at all. I tried downloading the file from repeaterbook which at least knows about the local repeater. No joy. I tried editing the files already on the radio but each time it somehow messed up. After many attempts and permutations I had to give up which is why I though getting an actual programmer would help.
Enter Chirp (on Windows, yukβ¦). It downloaded from the radio fine but when I looked at the repeater list it seemed broken β all it had was a list of callsigns and no other information. Ugh! But then I remembered that the radio had whinged that there were no repeaters. So, I loaded a known good repeater list file already omitted the SD card, checked the radio would see repeaters when DR is pressed, and downloaded that from the radio into Chirp. The repeater list is just as broken.
Okβ¦ so I exported everything from Chirp as CSV and opened in LibreOffice. But it does not export the repeater list so I am no further towards understanding how the data works. Time to hit the βnet. Meanwhile, I checked the current repeater list to see if the βNear Repeaterβ option was workingβ¦ nopeβ¦ 20 minutes in and the radio still has not got a GPS location, just like the FT2D!
Fiddling further with Chirp I found someone had kindly created a list of repeaters that does include our local one. I downloaded this and tried to load it into Chirp but it just says the file format is invalid. I copied it to the SD card and tried to import it into the ID51 β data error. Ok, this has gone far enough, this is not rocket science but it seems that it is made so.
Letβs try Icomβs own software, apparently called cs-51plus2. This is called cloning software and, of course is for Windows. After installing the software it read the ID51 ok. I found the repeater list under βDigitalβ and, indeed, the local repeater is missing. The big question is, can I add it? Ok, I added theΒ local repeater to the end of the list of repeaters, adding the frequency and offset, plus coordinates. Coordinates are degrees, minutes and seconds but I had digital so had to convert β not a biggie. Wrote the data back to the radio and rebooted. Andβ¦ the repeater is there! And it keys! Just had to wait for the radio to find the GPS β I reckon it does this by carrier pigeon β but finally the βNear Repeaterβ function works and also finds the newly-added local repeater. Now to add the foreign onesβ¦
So what is the takeaway from all of this? I wasted money on RT Systems software by assuming it would work the same as the FT2D software i.e. use the SD card. Never mind. I tried Chirp but that just confused the issue. And the manufacturerβs own software, generally looked down on, worked fine! (Apparently the software comes with the radio, I donβt remember it having a CD and there is no sign of it but I downloaded it from Icom just fine). I must remind myself if I ever get another radio to first try the manufacturerβs software as my needs are generally lightweight, otherwise try Chirp, and last get the RT Systems software after making sure (by which I mean email them as it is very muddled reading the literature) whether it needs their special cable β and, personally, if it does then I wonβt buy the software. I mean, come on, I pay for the software and I am forced to buy a lead Iβll probably only use once or twice?