Drachen_Fire
Member
I am currently in a place I'd rather not be in.....
I own an active paratransit company that is beginning to see expansion, uptick in business, and the need for a dispatcher. Likewise, our ambulance side has been grinding along, not finding much luck in medical direction, but that luck may soon change. Bottom line is that our old system was only being used for day-to-day chatter between company officers, and now, we will be handling service communications.
In our early days, we have been using a UHF community repeater leased from a small radio shop. After the shop owner narrowbanded our channel, in June or so, the signal went to pot. We can't access the repeater from our dispatch base. The terrain is western PA, with many mountains and valleys. The repeater is about 18 miles away over rough terrain. Whereas before, it was difficult to use the system with a portable, now not even our base works, and mobiles are spotty at best.
This situation is really irking the crap out of me.
Enter.....other radio shops. We cannot afford to place our own system on the air. There are no more community repeaters, and no more conventional anything. My business is being courted by two radio shops to replace our provider.
Right off the bat, I'm ruling out push-to-talk phones. I feel that PTT phones in a business like this one are lazy, a distraction, and are more expensive in the long run.
Staley Communications is offering the TriConnex system. Right off the bat, the first salesman they sent me knew nothing about the system at all. He couldn't answer any questions, dropped off the most ghettotastic beat-up MotoTRBO demo set I've ever seen, and left. Over a week later, I took the demo set back, to an office that had no idea it was gone. They had fired my salesman. The new salesman is much better, much more technically literate, and far easier to deal with. He also went over the ins and outs of the system with me. I would be locked into specific lines of TRBO gear, the XPR6550, XPR7550, XPR4350, XPR4550, and XPR5550, all with Connect Plus option boards (which are insanely expensive). Needless to say, the TriConnex system is superb, but I'd be stuck with Motorola, and I'd be stuck buying NEW Motorola.
Next up, Mobile Radio Service is offering two different systems. I've normal business with them, but they have been very slow on the uptake. I contacted both shops on the same day. While my demo on TriConnex has been over with for two weeks, I have yet to receive the demo set for either of MRS' systems. MRS is offering a narrowbanded UHF LTR analog system, and a UHF LTR NXDN digital system. According to the salesman himself, coverage for where I need to go is going to be "spotty" and won't play well with portables on the analog system, with stated coverage being better for the NXDN system, which is currently being built-out.
Why do radio shops make these decisions insanely difficult, and why is everyone so lazy about taking my money? I've never seen demos come in so slow, I've never seen people so unconcerned with making a sale, and I've never seen coverage for so many systems suck so badly.
I own an active paratransit company that is beginning to see expansion, uptick in business, and the need for a dispatcher. Likewise, our ambulance side has been grinding along, not finding much luck in medical direction, but that luck may soon change. Bottom line is that our old system was only being used for day-to-day chatter between company officers, and now, we will be handling service communications.
In our early days, we have been using a UHF community repeater leased from a small radio shop. After the shop owner narrowbanded our channel, in June or so, the signal went to pot. We can't access the repeater from our dispatch base. The terrain is western PA, with many mountains and valleys. The repeater is about 18 miles away over rough terrain. Whereas before, it was difficult to use the system with a portable, now not even our base works, and mobiles are spotty at best.
This situation is really irking the crap out of me.
Enter.....other radio shops. We cannot afford to place our own system on the air. There are no more community repeaters, and no more conventional anything. My business is being courted by two radio shops to replace our provider.
Right off the bat, I'm ruling out push-to-talk phones. I feel that PTT phones in a business like this one are lazy, a distraction, and are more expensive in the long run.
Staley Communications is offering the TriConnex system. Right off the bat, the first salesman they sent me knew nothing about the system at all. He couldn't answer any questions, dropped off the most ghettotastic beat-up MotoTRBO demo set I've ever seen, and left. Over a week later, I took the demo set back, to an office that had no idea it was gone. They had fired my salesman. The new salesman is much better, much more technically literate, and far easier to deal with. He also went over the ins and outs of the system with me. I would be locked into specific lines of TRBO gear, the XPR6550, XPR7550, XPR4350, XPR4550, and XPR5550, all with Connect Plus option boards (which are insanely expensive). Needless to say, the TriConnex system is superb, but I'd be stuck with Motorola, and I'd be stuck buying NEW Motorola.
Next up, Mobile Radio Service is offering two different systems. I've normal business with them, but they have been very slow on the uptake. I contacted both shops on the same day. While my demo on TriConnex has been over with for two weeks, I have yet to receive the demo set for either of MRS' systems. MRS is offering a narrowbanded UHF LTR analog system, and a UHF LTR NXDN digital system. According to the salesman himself, coverage for where I need to go is going to be "spotty" and won't play well with portables on the analog system, with stated coverage being better for the NXDN system, which is currently being built-out.
Why do radio shops make these decisions insanely difficult, and why is everyone so lazy about taking my money? I've never seen demos come in so slow, I've never seen people so unconcerned with making a sale, and I've never seen coverage for so many systems suck so badly.