Well it would not be the first time I (we, all of us who like to walk on
the wild side) I have had to go out and
fight with software to make things work. I have Pi's all around the house,
WeeWx for the WX station, two of
them for DMR hot spots, two of them for Ubiquiti hotspot managers (I have
an
Chuck, The huge problem with the NanpPi Duo, and all of the teensy boards
from FriendlyELEC or anyone except Raspberry, is the lack of a large
support base. With the Raspberry PI, you get the entire massive user base
that will give you help if you need it, in many different forums. If you
have lot
Those are beautiful pieces of art... Gotta get me one Still love my
Pi's though...
On Tue, Apr 9, 2019 at 1:37 PM Dan Clemmensen
wrote:
> Here is the requested diagram for the FT-4. Note that the Baofang uses a
> different cable.
>
> WARNING: Please do not blindly adapt this for other radio
Not without a lot of work and a very small soldering iron.
> On 09 April 2019 at 14:26 Paul Vuksanaj wrote:
>
>
> Dan,
>
> I purchased the above referenced radio and it’s a 220Mhz model. Is there a
> way to modify it to operate on the lower VHF band?
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
Here is the requested diagram for the FT-4. Note that the Baofang uses a
different cable.
WARNING: Please do not blindly adapt this for other radios. This entire
scheme can probably be adapted for any radio that uses a 3.3V setial
connection, but if you plug in an older radio that uses higher volt
Dan,
I purchased the above referenced radio and it’s a 220Mhz model. Is there a way
to modify it to operate on the lower VHF band?
Sent from my iPhone
___
chirp_users mailing list
chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com
http://intrepid.danplanet.com/mailm
Dan,
I'm a little brain dead when it comes to hardware. Would you post a simple
diagram of how you wired FT4 to NanoPi? Witch OS are you running on the
NanoPi?
Thanks
Fred
___
chirp_users mailing list
chirp_users@intrepid.danplanet.com
http://intrepid.d