I never said that repeater book was correct, just stated what it did have listed. I would love to see the 1.25m band start getting used more. The closest one I know of to me is St Paul. I am about 47 air miles away from there and unless that antenna is at least 100 feet in the air, I will never reach it as there is too much terrain in the way. I live in northern Montgomery County. I do know that repeater is pretty much linked full time to the Eolia 2m repeater now days.
I check into the weekly 2m net on the Eolia 2m repeater and a lot of people from St Charles County use the St Paul 1.25m repeater to check into the net. The Eolia 2m repeater is linked to the St Paul 1.25m repeater and also linked to the Paris Mo and Monroe City 2m repeaters.
My issue with all the tri band and quad band mobile radios is the output power on 1.25 compared to the output on 2m and 70cm. Now if Icom or Yaesu would offer a true 50 watt 1.25m mobile radio I would get one. I have read too many mixed reviews on the Alinco and TYT 50 watt 1.25m mobile radios.
Does anyone know what the output power level is suppose to be on the Kenwood TM-D750? I bet it will be like any other tri/quad band and have a low output power level.
Good to know St. Paul is still actually on the air, thanks for the info. I'll have to have a friend of mine check in from over that way. Yes, most the current crop of Tri-band mobiles are 5"ish" watts. My Kenwoods were from the 'Novice era' and only do 25 watts on 220, but that's what they were allowed back then. I have no problems hitting 6-7 repeaters from my QTH, at least on a good day.
I'd certainly hope, should Kenwood actually release that radio, they allow it more than the usual 5 watts. Like I said I'm 99.9% sure the price alone will make me not jump on it, but I'm sure others likely will.
I'm about 50 miles east of the 224.98 machine, on a good day I can still work it but the band needs to be up a little bit. Maybe if I had 50 watts vs 25 it would be a bit better but I don't honestly know. If that repeater was important to me I'd simply get a small 100 watt amp and go from there. (maybe I'll borrow a 50 and see if it honestly makes any difference I know someone that has one).
FWIW we had a neat opening on 220 yesterday, I was able to work two stations right at 90 miles to the north. A friend of mine with a much taller antenna got those guys plus a couple right at 100 miles. Was kind of interesting, was not able to work them on 2 meters or 70 cm, seemed to just be an opening around the 220 area.