No problem! Thanks. Originally I was trying to export the image file to a CSV file... I knew there had to be a better way, and sure enough it was right in front of me 😂
Hi, I have an answer for you, but before I answer, can I confirm, is this for Ham, GMRS, or Scanner listening (like police?). No, I am not a sad ham; I just want to test it to confirm it works before telling you. Thanks! Also, what radio?
That was a great presentation. CHIRP is really powerful, and steadily improving. I really appreciate using it. I recently found one repeater in my area using digital tones. They listed the digital tone as 250. When I entered it a box with a drop down menu appeared that contained a setting of NN as default and a couple other settings. I found no reference at the repeaters listing for NN or any other setting. What is this NN setting for ? Thank you in advance.
new at chirp.. but i made my list uploaded to radio (TWICE NOW) and cant figure out why its not saving to radio, after cloning is done.. i turn the yeasu FT-8900 off .. unplug radio from programing cable and turn radio back on.. and nothing got saved... what am i missing ??
Great question. The lame answer has to do with "using hte minimal amount of power necessary to make the contact" as per the FCC rules and regulations. A better answer would be save battery life (lower power, better battery consumption) and there may be situations where you wish to reduce your footprint of how far your signal gets out. The battery consumption is probably the more logical reason. Have a good one
Fantastic shortcuts! These work in almost all "windows" programs on almost all operating systems!
Awesome shortcuts!
I was trying to figure this out! Many thanks! VA7TIR
Great shortcuts! These will save me a lot of time. Similar to Microsoft Excel shortcuts. Thanks for showing this. 73s, Mike K1MPR
No problem! Thanks. Originally I was trying to export the image file to a CSV file... I knew there had to be a better way, and sure enough it was right in front of me 😂
Very efficient!. Thanks for sharing.
73's from Paul, WB0BBC
Thank you Sir!
Question to anyone: Is it possible to set a frequency so you can still receive it but not transmit on it?
Hi, I have an answer for you, but before I answer, can I confirm, is this for Ham, GMRS, or Scanner listening (like police?). No, I am not a sad ham; I just want to test it to confirm it works before telling you. Thanks! Also, what radio?
That was a great presentation. CHIRP is really powerful, and steadily improving. I really appreciate using it. I recently found one repeater in my area using digital tones. They listed the digital tone as 250. When I entered it a box with a drop down menu appeared that contained a setting of NN as default and a couple other settings. I found no reference at the repeaters listing for NN or any other setting. What is this NN setting for ? Thank you in advance.
What radio are you working with? Thanks
@@HAMRADIODUDE The radio is a Baofeng UV-5R.
new at chirp.. but i made my list uploaded to radio (TWICE NOW) and cant
figure out why its not saving to radio, after cloning is done.. i turn the
yeasu FT-8900 off .. unplug radio from programing cable and turn radio back on.. and
nothing got saved... what am i missing ??
sorry , stupid me.. it was still in VFO .. went to memory and all was there lol
Glad to hear you got it working, I was away for a few weeks and unable to respond. 73!
Dumb question here. Why would you want to use low power vs high power? Are there any cons to always using high so you get the most output?
Great question. The lame answer has to do with "using hte minimal amount of power necessary to make the contact" as per the FCC rules and regulations. A better answer would be save battery life (lower power, better battery consumption) and there may be situations where you wish to reduce your footprint of how far your signal gets out. The battery consumption is probably the more logical reason. Have a good one
@@HAMRADIODUDE sound good! Thanks for the quick response!
Great info! Appreciate it!
Very useful, thank you!