This site is home to both the club repeater and the Intermountain Intertie.
RACOON K7RCN
448.950- 77.0Hz
447.250- 77.0Hz
APRS K7RCN
144.390 - MALAD DIGI
Malad Intertie WA7FDR
447.225- 100.0HZ
Part of the Intermountain Intertie
147.220+ 123.0 Hz K7UB Riverside, UT
Coverage into Malad, Logan, and down the I-15 corridor southbound
Linked to 145.430
145.430- 123.0 Hz K7UB Bluespring Hills (Thiokol)
Most of Box Elder County, hub repeater of the GSARC
448.300- 123.0 Hz K7UB Bluespring Hills (Thiokol)
Hub linking repeater.
145.290- 123.0 Hz K7UB Brigham City, UT
Brigham City, Perry, Willard.
Linked to 145.430
147.380+ 123.0 Hz K7UB Dunn Peak
On the raft river range above park valley. Wide coverage into ID especially along the I-84
Linked to 145.430
146.720- 103.5 Hz WA7KMF Mt. Logan
Majority of Cache County and surrounding
449.625- 103.5 Hz WA7KMF Mt. Logan
Mt. Logan UHF
146.260+ 103.5 Hz WA7KMF Promontory
Wide area coverage from SLC to the ID border
Linked to Mt. Logan
145.310- 103.5 Hz WA7KMF Red Spur
Bear Lake, Montpelier, Cache National
Linked to Mt. Logan
146.720- 103.5 Hz WA7KMF Mt. Logan
Majority of Cache County and surrounding
Linked to Mt. Logan
"The Repeater is Down"
Some intermittence was noted with the repeater earlier in the day leading up to complete outage around 1130. This was reported to the repeater team who were able to take some troubleshooting steps to determine the system was timed out again. No carriers were noticed by club members in the valley on the input which brought some suspicion. With this report, along with a list of other tasks needing to be done, a trip up the hill was decided to be had to catch the system in the act. KG7RDR, KG7TIR, WD9DWD, and K2RKT arrived in the early afternoon and began checking things out. It was determined that the repeater radios were functioning as expected, but the controller was not receiving appropriate signals. There are two aspects to this, a COS (carrier operated signal or squelch signal) and a TOS (tone operated signal) which will trigger if the input tone of 77.0 is correct. These two signals are presented to the repeater controller which qualifies them and begins repeating if both are present. Due to the design of the radio not being able to sink enough current, a pair of outboard NPN transistors (2N2222) were installed in the DB25 clamshell on the back of the Kenwood repeater radio. These transistors take the small amount of current from the Kenwood TKR-850 repeater auxiliary outputs and trigger the RLC-2 controller by dragging the lines to ground.
Upon disassembly of the DB25 clamshell some interesting issues with the leads of the COS transistor were noticed. All of the tin and silver coating was flaking off and the solder joint had become unreliable. A 10k resistor was replaced and the transistor leads tinned with solder. After reassembly and reconnection all seemed well for the moment, but some tactical wiggling of the transistors would cause intermittence. The connector was disassembled again at which point it was noted the COS transistor was an older germanium variety in a metal TO-18 package and the insulators had fallen apart resulting in occasional shorting of the emitter to the housing which is at the same potential as the collector. This resulted in the repeater controller being grounded and "seeing" an "active" signal as if someone was keyed up which would time out the system. Fortunately we had a modern silicon replacement on site.
Due to the sun going down we took a detour to do some work on the intertie repeater. A new battery was installed and the tower was climbed to replace the single folded dipole going to Jumpoff. The signal margin on that link was not as high as desired resulting in some hiss on everything from the north. The old yagi had been left on site by the operators of the intertie in anticipation of this. KG7RDR had been asked to install the antenna which was completed in the dark. A new N connector was put on an open LDF4-50 heliax to comply with regulations and the cables were all buttoned up for the winter. This completed, focus was turned back to the K7RCN repeater.
A modern 2N2222 transistor was soldered inside the shell and tests verified everything was stable. For good measure some antioxidant grease was applied to the connectors and the repeater was put back into service. The crew left the site sometime after 2030 in the cold and dark with everything working.
~KG7RDR
"The Repeater is Down"
On this day it was reported that the repeater was down. The repeater custodians were able to get in via a link frequency and determined that the main repeater was in timeout status with a signal on the input for nearly 13 hours. This carrier dropped and allowed the repeater to reset on Sunday morning around 0730.
~KG7RDR
Repeater frequency changed
Following reports of near crippling interference to our club repeater a trip was made by KG7RDR and K7WIV to ascertain its cause. It was found that a link radio on site related to the intertie was the culprit. This conflict had been identified a few years ago in the old building and concerns were raised, but due to a combination of factors was not a major issue. Unfortunately in the new configuration with the proximity of our antennas the nearness of the frequencies, only 100kHz, it had now become an issue. With the high received signal level we had no reasonable course to acceptably mitigate the situation and as such needed to coordinate with the Utah VHF Society.
With the coming of snow at high altitudes and logistical issues it would not be practical to move the offending transmitters frequency at this time, nor would it be ideal to simply shut it off resulting in a portion of the intertie being down all winter. This change would require at least two trips to mountaintops and likely the modification and replacement of some infrastructure items that all parties involved were not ready to initiate at this time.
After some deliberation it was decided that we would take the initiative and move our repeater to a new frequency to avoid further frequency and organizational conflict. This move was authorized by both the Utah and Idaho frequency coordinators and a new frequency of 447.250 was chosen. Conveniently there was a club meeting the same evening and the new frequency was approved. Following the meeting KD5IDE and KG7RDR returned to the repeater to retune and adjust the system. After two hours the repeater had been moved and further tests showed no further detectable desense from the intertie with the equipment and procedures on hand.
We understand the concern from some club members regarding the decisions made to move our system rather than force action by the offending party. These questions can be directed towards the club president or repeater operators for further details. It was decided this would be the best move for all involved to sustain healthy operation of all repeaters on the site.
~KG7RDR