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World of Ham Radio 1997
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WOHR97_AmSoft_(1997-02-01).iso
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c5608_1.doc
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1997-02-01
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From: "David C. Donley" <dd3u+@andrew.cmu.edu>
Newsgroups: rec.radio.amateur.equipment
>
C5608 mods
It is *easy* to destroy your radio while performing the procedures
described within this document. It is also possible to destroy your
radio using the newfound capibilities given to you by these procedures.
It is also possible that the FCC and/or other amateur and professional
radio operators will destroy your radio if they catch you transmitting
out of band. You are incurring a legal risk by performing the
modifications described herin. I am not responsible for anything that
may happen to you or your property if you do any of this.
Standard C5608 mods:
800Mhz receive:
If you can get the Standard to read 800Mhz by holding
the func button and pressing up arrow (on the radio itself) you do not
need to add any resisters or anything. But you do need to add an 800
Mhz plug. I got my plug on a cord by buying a 3ft TNC
externderizer for $5 and cutting it in half. If you live in an area
where surplus stuff is available, you can do much better pricewise.
Please only listen to the public service communications in the 800Mhz
band. Intercepting radio cellular telephone communications is illegal
even though they intrude on your property and give you brain cancer.
Remove the black disc off the
back of the radio, insert a piece of RG58 coax, and solder the center
of the coax to the same PCB land as the center of the really tiny
piece of coax already in the 440Mhz RF section, and the braid of the
coax to the big empty untinned land on the other side of the first
land. The location to solder this stuff is right next to the round
RF amp with four radially protrouding pins, if that helps you locate
it any better. Secure the cable to the case somehow (wireties?) so it
won't shread your radio when you yank on it.
Back of Radio (Heatsink)
Bottom
!
!
! ! ! !
! ! ! -O-
! ! ! !
! ---
! [XXX] [YYY] [ZZ] /\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\/\
!
!-------------------------------------------------------------
!
! Lots of neat stuff. ~20 P.P.I. (Pots Per Inch)
!
!
The square thing is a big electrolytic capacitor, the
/\/\/\/\/ is the coax that is already there, and you
should solder your shield to XXX and your center cond. to
YYY. Your RG58 should come in directly on top of the big
electrolytic capacitor. You would be insane to attempt this
without unscrewing the red and black +12V DC power wires.
You would be insane to attempt this anyway as I have and I
now know how poorly it works.
If you can't get the radio to read 800Mhz, remove the 1/8watt zero
ohm resistor that is the third one counting from the + symbol on the
side of the CPU board pointing into the radio. On the other side
of the CPU board, this "resistor" is labled 'G'. If you don't know
which board is the CPU board, definatly don't do this mod.
To get to the CPU board, remove the top and bottom panels of the radio,
and snap off the plastic side panels. This will allow you to access
the screws that hold the front panel on. To avoid damaging the front
panel, begin your snap-off attempts at the rear of the radio, by the
heatsink. The side panels fit under the edge of the front panel and it
will be necessicary to slide them towards the back of the radio to r
remove them once they are partially snapped loose.
The 800Mhz receive on the Standard is incredibly insensitive compared
to a scanner. If you have any other way of receiving
800Mhz, it will be a waste of time for you to do this mod.
BTW: Press Func+Down to get out of 800Mhz mode.
Standard 350Mhz receive:
Remove the #2 zero ohm jumper (also labeled E on the backside of the
CPU board)
There doesn't appear to be an antenna mod for this. Sensitivity is so
bad it leads me to believe that the reason why this is disabled is
because the RF circuitry is not implemented. This is turned on and off
the same way as the 800Mhz except the 2M band must be active instead
of the 70cm band. The 440Mhz band will tune down to 350Mhz so this
mod is even less useful than I could have possibly suspected.
It doesn't seem to be possible to switch to or from 800 or 350Mhz from
the remote microphone.
Out-of-band transmit:
Remove the two surface-mount chip resisters on the hard-to-get-to side
of the CPU board labled "D" and "H". The "D" resister controls
VHF transmit, and the "H" one controls UHF transmit. Please make a
diagram of where all the plugs plug back in when you take the front
panel assembly off. There are a few 2 pin connectors that differ
only by the color of their wires.
Expect transmitting from 130-155Mhz on VHF, 400-469.995 on UHF.
Please note that the Standard C5608 mobile is not appoved for
transmitions outside of the Amateur band. Such transmitions are
illegal even if you do have the proper commercial license. If you
want to run it into a dummy load and use the harmonics to interfere
with some wierd circuit you're building, then no problem, have a ball.
To manually switch between AM/FM demod on the VHF band, press Func+Sub.
Again, this cannot be performed from the Mic. It defaults to AM in the
aircraft freq range, so this shouldn't be so bad.
Repeater mode is enabled by pressing the 144 and 440 band buttons
simultainiously. Cannot be performed from the mic. To prevent the
radio from repeating in both directions, set the TSQ and CSQ to bizzare
values on the band you don't want to be retransmitted and set the
repeater offset to some other wierd freq that is hardly ever used.
KD6ACL
David Donley
==============================================================================
Note: I haven't tried or verified this, proceed at your own risk. And
DO NOT transmit outside of legal bands! WA2ISE
/EX