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You don't necessarily need two antennas for a repeater though. You use duplexer and one antenna. Your input and output from your repeater go into the high and low pass on your duplexer. And then the output on your duplexer goes to one antenna. So the same antenna does transmit and receive. Much, much better than trying to use two separate antennas and get the alignment and stuff right on those. But yeah, that setup that George mentioned, it's just a high power simplex node. It's like your own private node, but it has more kick behind it. And I really wish they'd stop calling it a repeater because it's not a repeater and that confuses people all the time. In regard to which radio I would choose, if I could only have one. And I'm not talking radios I don't have. Because if I had a preference, my radio of choice would probably be the Icom ID51 Plus or the ID52, whatever the newest handheld from Icom is because I love those radios. Just the look of them, the way they function, the fact that they're all menu driven, they've got that DR mode in them, just great for D-Star. They also are very good for analog, but primarily a D-Star radio. Now I've had experience with D-Star for several years. You're talking digital modes, Josh. I've had experience with D-Star for several years, and I've also had experience with DMR for several years. And essentially spending a bunch of money to take on a new mode, I think is just frivolous. Unless you really want to get into that mode, you've got to consider your time allotment for amateur radio. Is all your amateur radio time already being eaten up by someone, something or someone or some group? Do you have a group of friends on the air already? And are those friends, the people you want to talk to, going to be on that mode, DMR or D-Star or Fusion? Chances are not. You might get one or two that you can send a text message to and meet up on the air, but the chances of running into people you know are far slimmer on any digital mode than they are on analog All-Star. So I got out of most of the digital modes, pretty much all of them. I've still got a D-Star set up here. I've still got a DMR set up. As a matter of fact, I'm using a DMR radio right now. It's on analog, but the MD-380 is my favorite D-Star radio or my favorite DMR radio because it has custom firmware. This is something you can't do with every DMR radio. It also lets you download the DMR database. So when you're talking on the air, you actually see the DMR number, the name and...
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